User:JPRiley/Gilman

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! Year !! Building !! Address !! City !! State !! Notes !! Image !! Reference

1845St. Paul Episcopal Church59 Court StDedhamMassachusettsDestroyed by fire in 1856.Roger G. Reed, Building Victorian Boston: The Architecture of Gridley J. F. Bryant (Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts Press, 2006)
1846Central Congregational Church804 Washington StBathMaineNicknamed the "Chocolate Church" and now used as an arts center under that name.100px
1846St. James Episcopal Church120 Main StAmesburyMassachusettsDestroyed by fire in 1899.Journal of the Proceedings of the Fifty-sixth Annual Convention of the Diocese of Massachusetts (Boston: James B. Dow, 1846): 80-81.
1848"Fern Hill" for William P. WinchesterCoolidge AveWatertownMassachusettsThe estate was acquired by adjacent Mount Auburn Cemetery in 1885, and the house was later demolished.
1849St. Mary Episcopal ChurchBowdoin and Topliff StDorchester, BostonMassachusettsDestroyed by fire in 1887. The parish built a new church at a different site.Journal of the Proceedings of the Fifty-ninth Annual Convention of the Diocese of Massachusetts (Boston: James B. Dow, 1849): 81.
1851"Wellesley" for H. H. Hunnewell845 Washington StWellesleyMassachusettsThe town was later named for the estate. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988 as part of the Hunnewell Estates Historic District.Keith N. Morgan, Buildings of Massachusetts: Metropolitan Boston (Charlottesville, VA: University of Virginia Press, 2009)
1854First Congregational Church of Saugus300 Central StSaugusMassachusettsStill owned by the church, but used by the William Sutton Lodge of Masons.History of Essex County, Massachusetts, ed. D. Hamilton Hurd, vol. 1 (Philadelphia: J. W. Lewis & Company, 1888)
1855Exeter Town Hall{{efn|name=Dwight|Credited to the partnership of Gilman & Dwight.}}10 Front StExeterNew HampshireListed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973 as part of the Front Street Historic District.100px
1857Hotel Pelham351 Boylston StBostonMassachusettsA young member of Gilman's firm, Alfred Stone, supervised construction.Jean A. Follett, “The Hotel Pelham: A New Building Type for America,” American Art Journal 15, no. 4 (Autumn 1983): 58-73. Demolished in 1915.100px
1857St. Paul Episcopal Church59 Court StDedhamMassachusettsHistory of Norfolk County, Massachusetts, ed. D. Hamilton Hurd (Philadelphia: J. W. Lewis & Company, 1884)
1858House for David Sears357 Kent StBrooklineMassachusettsDemolished.James C. O'Connell, The Hub's Metropolis: Greater Boston's Development from Railroad Suburbs to Smart Growth (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2013)
1858St. Andrew Episcopal ChurchHawthorne StChelseaMassachusettsFrom 1864 known as the St. Luke Episcopal Church. Burned in the Great Chelsea fire of 1908.
1859Arlington Street Church, Unitarian80 Boylston StBostonMassachusettsDemolished in 1915.100pxArlington Street Church NRHP Registration Form (1973)
1860Christ's Church70 Colchester StBrooklineMassachusettsListed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978 as part of the Longwood Historic District.
1864Newburyport Public Library94 State StNewburyportMassachusettsThe conversion of the 1771-built house of Nathaniel Tracy for library purposes. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984 as part of the Newburyport Historic District.100px"[http://mhc-macris.net/Details.aspx?MhcId=NWB.365 NWB.365]", mhc-macris.net, Massachusetts Historical Commission, n.d.
1867Equitable Building{{efn|name=Kendall|Credited to the partnership of Gilman & Kendall.}}120 BroadwayNew YorkNew YorkDesigned in association with consulting architect George B. Post. Burned in 1912.100pxSarah Bradford Landau and Carl W. Condit, Rise of the New York Skyscraper: 1865-1913 (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1996)
1867New York State Capitol{{efn|name=Kendall|Credited to the partnership of Gilman & Kendall.}}State StAlbanyNew YorkDesigned in association with architects Fuller & Laver. Kendall withdrew from the firm in 1868, and Gilman from the project in 1869. The building was not completed until 1899, with further contributions from architects Henry Hobson Richardson, Leopold Eidlitz and Isaac G. Perry.100pxAndrea J. Lazarski, "Capitol Architects," Architects in Albany, ed. Diana S. Waite (Albany, NY: Mount Ida Press, 2009)
1868House for Benjamin E. Bates{{efn|name=Kendall}}9 E 40th StNew YorkNew YorkDemolished.Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 1, no. 15 (June 27 1868): 2.
1869Christ Chapel,
Trinity Episcopal Church
371 Delaware AveBuffaloNew YorkIntended as the first part of a church complex designed by Gilman for Christ Episcopal Church. Christ merged with Trinity in 1884, and the church was eventually built to designs by Cyrus Kinne Porter in 1884-86. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2008.100pxTrinity Episcopal Church NRHP Registration Form (2008)
1869House for Eliza M. Gregory288 Madison AveNew YorkNew YorkDemolished.Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 3, no. 68 (July 3 1869): 10.
1869St. John Episcopal Church1333 Bay StStaten IslandNew YorkNew York City Landmarks Preservation Commission, St. John's Church Designation Report (1974)
1870Houses for Sidney W. Hopkins13-17 E 57th StNew YorkNew YorkDemolished.Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 5, no. 124 (July 30 1870): 6.
1872Bennett Building139 Fulton StNew YorkNew York100pxNew York City Landmarks Preservation Commission, Bennett Building Designation Report (1995)
1872Drexel Building23 Wall StNew YorkNew YorkDemolished in 1913.100px"The Drexel Building," Harper's Weekly 17, no. 859 (June 14 1873): 509-510.
1873Butler Exchange111 Westminster StProvidenceRhode IslandDemolished in 1925.100pxWilliam McKenzie Woodward and Edward F. Sanderson, Providence: A Citywide Survey of Historic Resources, ed. David Chase (Providence, RI: Rhode Island Historical Preservation Commission, 1986)
1874Equitable Building67 Milk StBostonMassachusettsDemolished in 1922.100px"The New York Equitable Life Insurance Company's Building," Architectural Sketch-book 2, no. 3 (September 1874): n. p.
1877"The Paddocks" for DeLancey Astor Kane280 Davenport AveNew RochelleNew YorkLater used as the Colony Club. Demolished during the 1980s.100px"Residence of De Lancey Kane, Esq., New Rochelle, Westchester Co., N. Y.," American Architect and Building News 3, no. 109 (January 26 1878): 31.
1877Westmoreland Hotel44 Union Sq ENew YorkNew YorkDemolished in 1928.Superior Court of the City of New York. General Term. De Witt C. Weeks and Francis Marion Weeks, Plaintiffs and Respondents, Against William McCarty Little, Individually, and as Executor, Etc. of Augusta M. Little, Deceased (and Others), Defendants and Appellants. Case on Appeal (New York: M. B. Brown, 1880)
1880Grace Chapel91 Harbor StBranfordConnecticutDemolished in 1925."Connecticut," Churchman 42, no. 14 (October 2 1880): 371.
1880House for George W. Quintard922 Fifth AveNew YorkNew YorkDemolished in 1949.Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 26, no. 645 (July 24 1880): 679.

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References

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