Mason Maury
Mason Maury | |
---|---|
Born | Louisville, Kentucky, U.S. | May 1, 1847
Died | January 1, 1919 Louisville, Kentucky, U.S. | (aged 71)
Resting place | Cave Hill Cemetery Louisville, Kentucky |
Alma mater | Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
Occupation | Architect |
Spouse |
|
Awards | American Institute of Architects Fellow |
Signature | |
Johnson Mason Maury (May 1, 1847 – January 2, 1919) was an American architect and inventor who designed and built over 700 residential and commercial structures, mostly in Louisville, Kentucky where he pioneered Richardsonian Romanesque and Prairie School architecture in Kentucky.[2] Maury is mostly known for his works on The Kenyon Building and The Kaufman-Strauss building.[3] Maury attended Male High School. After graduation, Maury moved to Boston where he studied architecture for two years under architect H.H. Richardson who had designed the Grace Episcopal Church during the time of Maury's stay. Maury returned to Louisville and worked under Episcopal Church Architect William H. Redin for six years. Maury was also a founding member of The Kentucky Association of Architects,[4] in which he served as Second Vice President, as well as President of the Louisville Chapter of the American Institute of Architecture.
Associated architects, draftsman, and contractors
[edit]- William H. Redin
- William J. Dodd
- Oscar Haupt, Superintendent of Kenyan Building, later relocated to Birmingham, AL
- E. Walter Hillerich
- Arthur Raymond Smith (draftsman)
- Greiner & Sons
Catalogue
[edit]Redin & Maury (1877)
[edit]Name | Photo | Location | Date Commissioned | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
W.H. Dillingham Residence | Second and Broadway Louisville, Kentucky |
1877 | demolished |
Mason Maury (1882–1887, 1895–1919)
[edit]Name | Photo | Location | Date Commissioned | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
S Bisley House | 1029 Bardstown Rd (1925 Baxter Ave) | 1884/1885 | current building has unoriginal front addition[5] | |
Charles P. Moorman Row Houses (St. Catherine) | 313–337 E St Catherine Louisville, Kentucky |
1884 | attributed design[6] | |
Charles P. Moorman Row Houses (Preston) | 1026–1040 S Preston Louisville, Kentucky |
1884/1885 | attributed design[7] | |
Henning & Sons, office building | Unknown | 1886 | [8] | |
Judge Russell Houston residence | 1332 South Fourth Street Louisville, Kentucky |
1886 | Louisville Bourbon Inn[9] | |
Dr. Hubbard M. Smith | Unknown | 1886 | [10] | |
Unknown | Owensboro, Kentucky | 1886 | [11] | |
Frederick H. Warren | Montgomery, Alabama | 1886 | [12] potentially (51) 459 Goldthwaite St | |
Kenyon Building | 112 South Fifth Street Louisville, Kentucky |
1886 | demolished in 1974[13] | |
W.S. Mathews Building House | 1245 (1333) Fourth Street Louisville, Kentucky |
1886 | demolished[14] | |
Henry L. Stone House | 1300 Third Street Louisville, Kentucky |
1886 | Juo. Greiner & Bros, builders[15] | |
Boyle Gill Boyle (B.O. Boyle) residence | 1118 or 1209 S Second Street Louisville, Kentucky |
1886 | J. N. Struck & Bros., builders[16] | |
K.W. Smith House | 1118 Third Street Louisville, Kentucky |
1886 | interior extensively remodeled with a rear addition in the 1920s for Archbishop John A. Floersh and again remodeled in the 1960s for D.J. Dougherty & Sons Funeral Home[17] | |
Charles P. Moorman House | Maybe St Catherine Louisville, Kentucky |
1886 | [18] | |
J.M. Bockner, dwelling | Maybe St Catherine Louisville, Kentucky |
1886 | [19] | |
William H. Mundy House | 623 Third St Louisville, Kentucky |
1886 | demolished[20] | |
George Merz | Unknown | 1886 | [21] | |
Thomas Shreve store and office building | 353–355 S Fifth Louisville, Kentucky |
1886 | [22] | |
J.D. Reed, two residences | Unknown | 1886 | [23] | |
Samuel Castleman House | 406 West Chestnut Louisville, Kentucky |
1886 | [24] | |
Central Passenger, R.R. Co. (stables) | Unknown | 1886 | [25] | |
Mrs. J. O'Riley House | 403 West Chestnut Street Louisville, Kentucky |
1886 | [26] | |
Mrs. James B. Clay, Sr. House | 4.5 miles on Versailles Pike, Lexington | 1886 | [27] | |
W.F. Rubel House | 1515 Hepburn Ave | 1886 | ||
O.T. Sutfield residence | 1014 South Third Street | 1886 | ||
Mrs. Catherine M. Short House | 1349 Fourth Street Louisville, Kentucky |
1886 | ||
J.F. Smith House | 1236 Second Street Louisville, Kentucky |
1886 | ||
Charles E. Wood House | 943 Cherokee Rd Louisville, Kentucky |
1886 | ||
Louisville Girl's High School | Southwest corner, Fifth and Hill | 1898 | Charles Meyer's designed the 1899 addition. demolished in 1971[28][29] | |
Barren County Courthouse | Barren County, Kentucky | 1896 | ||
Mary Meany House | 1414 S Fourth Louisville, Kentucky |
1897 | ||
Bullitt County Courthouse | Bullitt County, Kentucky | 1900/1902 | ||
Fountain Court Apartments | 414–418 Fountain Court Louisville, Kentucky |
1901 | ||
The Women's Club Building | 1212 S Fourth Street Louisville, Kentucky |
1901 | destroyed by fire in 1917 | |
Kaufman-Straus Building(Polytechnic Society Library) | 427 South Fourth Street | 1901 | [30] | |
John H. Heywood Elementary School | 422 Heywood Ave | 1902 | [31] | |
First Lutheran English Church | 417 E Broadway | 1904 | [32] | |
Christ Church Episcopal (Chattanooga, Tennessee) | 663 Douglas St, Chattanooga, TN | 1904 | ||
William W Davies House | 927 S Fourth Street Louisville, Kentucky |
1905 | demolished | |
Mason Maury House | 2119 Kenilworth Avenue Louisville, Kentucky |
1910 | ||
Whiteside House | 2409 Cherokee Parkway Louisville, Kentucky |
1910 | ||
Broadway Zion Baptist Church | 1301 W Broadway Louisville, Kentucky |
1910 | ||
Ralph E. Hill House | 2115 Maryland Avenue Louisville, Kentucky |
1911 | ||
W.H. Dillingham House | 215 West Broadway Louisville, Kentucky |
1910/1911 | demolished[33] | |
Office Building | 106 N 3rd St, Bardstown, Kentucky | 1911/1912 | heavy exterior remodeling has changed the original first floor design | |
Russell Meriweather Hughes House | 312 West Courtland Place San Antonio, TX |
1912 | former home of Russell Meriweather Hughes Jr. (La Meri) | |
Sapinsky's Clothing Store | 225 South Fourth Louisville, Kentucky |
1912 | demolished[34] | |
Highland Baptist Church | 1101 Cherokee Rd Louisville, Kentucky |
1913 | ||
Clement R. Manemann Store and Dwelling | St. Matthews | 1914 | ||
H.B. Bretney House | 1602 N Fountain Blvd, Springfield, Ohio | 1915 | ||
William A Thomson, remodel | 2100 Millvale Rd | 1915 | ||
Louisville Drying Machinery Company | 451 Baxter Avenue Louisville, Kentucky |
1916 |
Maury & Haupt (1887–1889)
[edit]Name | Photo | Location | Date Commissioned | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
W.L. Chambers (bank bldg.) | 223 North Montgomery, Sheffield, Alabama | 1887 | ||
W.C. Hutchins House | Unknown | 1887 | [35] | |
Mrs. Cecelia K. Crawford House | 971 Third Street | 1887 | Demolished[36][37] | |
Charles V Johnson House | 1524 Brook Street | 1887 | [38] | |
Foster Thomas House | 1322 South Fourth | 1887 | [39] | |
Cahaba Pump Station (Birmingham Water Works Company) | 4012 Sicard Hollow Rd, Birmingham, AL | 1887 | [40][41] | |
Jefferson Building Improvement Company (residence) | Birmingham, Alabama | 1887 | F.C. Thompson (contractor)[42] | |
T. L. Jefferson (9 houses) | Floyd and Gray | 1887 | demolished [43][44] | |
C. Johnson House | Unknown | 1887 | [45] | |
James Leech (block of dwellings 75 by 120) | Unknown | 1887 | [46] | |
McFarran Memorial Church (Louisville Church of Christ) | 1201 South Fourth Street | 1887 | ||
Charles Strater House(41 by 54) | 1439 St. James Ct. | 1887 | [47] | |
W.T. Underwood House | Birmingham, Alabama | 1887 |
Maury & Dodd (1889–1895)
[edit]Name | Photo | Location | Date Commissioned | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Southern Baptist Theological Seminary Memorial Library | Fifth and Broadway | 1888–89 | demolished in the 1960s[48][49] | |
Louisville Baptist Orphans' Home Addition | northwest corner of First and St Catherine | 1889 | demolished[50] | |
Charles T. Ballard House | 1251 First Street | 1889/1890 | [51] | |
Louisville Trust Company Building | 308 Fifth Street | 1890 | contained sculptures and other works by Enid Yandell | |
Cave S. Ashbrook House | 1037 S Third | 1891 | Demolished | |
Joshua Fry Bullitt, Jr. House | Big Stone Gap, Virginia | 1891 | [52] | |
California Fig Syrup Company | Thirteenth and Lexington | 1891 | ||
Mrs. William Cornwall Jr. residence | 521 West Oak | 1891 | demolished[53] | |
Fifth Street Baptist Church (Covenant Presbyterian Church) | 1901 W. Jefferson | 1891 | ||
Benjamin Flexner House | 525 W Ormsby | 1891 | [54] | |
J.A. Flexner House | 531 W Ormsby | 1891 | [55] | |
Miss Mary Lafon House | 1343 (1505) Fourth Avenue | 1891 | demolished | |
T.A. Lyons House | 1327 Brook | 1891 | ||
Dr. Joseph M. Mathews House | 923 Fourth Street | 1891 | [56] | |
Nelson County Courthouse | Bardstown, KY | 1891 | ||
George A. Newman House | 1123 Third Street | 1891 | ||
Miss Belle Quigley House | 1337 (1501) Fourth Avenue | 1891 | [57] | |
Charles L. Robinson House | 1334 Third Avenue | 1891 | ||
St. John's Episcopal Church | 1115 West Jefferson street, | 1891 | Agudath Achim Synagogue (1927–1960) until demolition | |
Hopkins County Courthouse | Madisonville, Kentucky | 1892 | ||
William J. Dodd House | 1469 St James Ct | 1892 | ||
Paul Cain House | 1459 St James Ct | 1892 | ||
Sam Stone Bush House | 230 Kenwood Hill Road | 1893 | ||
C.J.F. Allen House (alterations) | 1371 (1523) Fourth Street | 1893 | [58] | |
Curry Fertilizing | Buchanan and Washington Streets | 1893 | [59] | |
F.H or Charles Hibbard House | Beechmont | 1893 | [60] | |
H.M Caldwell House | Beechmont | 1893 | ||
The Kentucky Building | World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago | 1893 | demolished | |
Col Robert M. Martin residence and stables | Wilder Park | 1893 | lost in a fire around 1905[61] | |
Macauley's flat building | Walnut Street, beside Stark's Building | 1893 | demolished | |
H. Straus Dry Goods House (alterations) | 416–422 Market Street | 1893 | ||
H. Straus 6 residences | Second and Oak | 1893 | [62] | |
Susette G. Stewart House | 1208 First Street | 1893 | [63] | |
George T. Wood House | 1654 Cherokee Road | 1893 | [64] | |
G.H. Moore (alterations) | (930) fourth street | 1893 | [65] demolished | |
Edith Wilder(J.B. Wilder Trust) | 519 W Main St | 1893 | demolished in 1979 for the Kentucky Center for the Arts building.[66] | |
Harry McGoodwin House | 1504 S Third Street | 1893 | [67] | |
Adolph Rosenthal | Third near Oak | 1893 | [68] | |
Presbyterian Church | Greenville, Kentucky | 1893 | [69] | |
Block of residences (5) for Presbyterian Orphan's Home | Unknown | 1893 | [70] | |
Cornelia Bush House | 316 E. Kenwood Drive | 1894 | ||
C.J. Walton | Third and Hill | 1894 | [71] | |
C.J. Walton | Third and Hill | 1894 | [72] | |
John Otter | 1329 (1429) S Third St | 1894 | [73] | |
Standard Club | 543(639) Fifth St | 1894 | [74] | |
West End Baptist Church(St. Paul's Episcopal Church) | 1400 South Fourth Street | 1894 | ||
T.H. Glover | (1417) Garvin Place | 1894 | demolished | |
Lockie Rhodes | Third and Hill | 1894 | ||
Columbia Trust (add) | Market, between Second and Third | 1894 | ||
Mary Curran (three residences) | Second and Breckenridge | 1894 | ||
J.S. Bockee | 1230 Third Street (two brick and stone) | 1895 | [75] | |
E. L. Brown House | 1451 Fourth Street | 1895 | [76] | |
J.W. Brown House | 1455 Fourth Street | 1895 | [77] | |
Joseph T. Burt House | Third Street near B (Bloom) Street | 1895 | possibly 1030 S Brook St | |
James Clarke House | 1114 Third Street | 1895 | ||
Thomas Goudy House | Third and Hill | 1895 | [78] | |
F. H. Higgins House | 1517 Third Street (four residences) | 1895 | [79] | |
Drs. Samuel W and James M Holloway office and flats | 619(715) S Fourth | 1895 | demolished between 1912 and 1922 | |
J.C. Hughes House | 1467 St James Court | 1895 | ||
S. Jacobs store and flats | Market (7th and 8th) | 1895 | ||
William T. Johnston House | 1457 Fourth Street | 1895 | [80] | |
Dr. George W. Lewman House | 1365 Third Street | 1895 | [81] | |
Liederkanz Hall | 601 Walnut Street | 1895 | [82] | |
Ex. Stockdale House | 1414 Third Street | 1895 | [83] | |
H. Straus | 218–236 Burnett Ave, 215–221 Burnett Ave | 1895 | [84] | |
Patrick F. Walsh House | 1397 Third Street | 1895 | ||
Design for a University Building | Unknown | 1896 | ||
Lucia Avenue School Building(Bloom Elementary) | 1627 Lucia Avenue | 1896 | ||
Levering Gymnasium | 711 S Fifth St (rear of Norton Hall) | 1896 | demolished | |
Design for a clubhouse | Memphis, Tennessee | Unknown | ||
Lagonda Club Building | Springfield, Ohio | 1895 | Principal designer: Frank Mills Andrews. NRHP Asset [85] |
Maury & Hillerich (1904–1909)
[edit]Name | Photo | Location | Date Commissioned | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mrs. M. Cassily House | Indiana | Unknown | ||
Mrs. H.R. Whiteside | Louisville, Kentucky | 1907 | [86] | |
James A. Leech | Louisville, Kentucky | 1907 | [87] | |
John H. Sale, ten story building | Fourth and Walnut | 1907 | [88] |
- Board of Trade Building
- The Tobacco Warehouse and Trading Company Building[89][90][91]
- Underwriter's Reality Company Building
References
[edit][92] [93] [94] [95] [96] [97] [98]
- ^ "TROTTING MEETING POSTPONED." Courier-Journal (1869–1922), Oct 16, 1888, pp. 8.
- ^ Kleber, John E. The Kentucky Encyclopedia. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0813128838.
- ^ The City of Louisville and a Glimpse of Kentucky. Committee on industrial and commercial improvement of the Louisville board of trade. 1887-01-01. p. 147.
mason maury.
- ^ ARCHITECTS ORGANIZE: THE KENTUCKY ASSOCIATION FORMED, OFFICERS ELECTED AND OTHER BUSINESS TRANSACTED. (1887, Feb 12).
- ^ Classified Ad 1 – no Title." Courier-Journal (1869–1922), Jun 14, 1885, pp. 3.
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2021-09-17. Retrieved 2021-09-17.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2021-09-17. Retrieved 2021-09-17.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 7 February 1886, n. 1, p.13, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 7 February 1886, n. 1, p.13, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 7 February 1886, n. 1, p.13, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 7 March 1886, n. 4, p.37, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 7 March 1886, n. 4, p.36, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 7 April 1886, n. 5, p.50, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 7 April 1886, n. 5, p.50, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 7 April 1886, n. 5, p.50, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 7 April 1886, n. 5, p.51, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 7 April 1886, n. 5, p.51, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 7 April 1886, n. 5, p.51, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 7 April 1886, n. 5, p.51, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 7 April 1886, n. 5, p.51, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 7 April 1886, n. 5, p.51, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 7 July 1886, n. 11, p.103, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 7 July 1886, n. 11, p.103, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 7 July 1886, n. 11, p.103, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 7 July 1886, n. 11, p.103, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 7 July 1886, n. 11, p.103, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 7 July 1886, n. 11, p.103, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ LAW SCHOOL: WANTS ROOM IN THE BOYS' HIGH SCHOOL THE UNIVERSITY'S PROPERTY PLANS FOR A HANDSOME BUILDING AT FIFTH AND HILL STREETS." Courier-Journal (1869–1922), Jun 02, 1897, pp. 4.
- ^ PLANS SUBMITTED: WORK ON NEW HIGH SCHOOL WILL SOON BEGIN COST OF IMPROVEMENTS ESTIMATED AT $34,000." Courier-Journal (1869–1922), Feb 16, 1898, pp. 3.
- ^ Design Accepted for the New Polytechnic Library Building." Courier-Journal (1869–1922), Jun 04, 1901, pp. 3.
- ^ "DEFICIT: MAY BE MET BY ABOLISHING NIGHT SCHOOLS SHORTAGE IN SALARY FUND NO MONEY TO MAINTAIN KIN- DEBGABTENS IN SCHOOL SYSTEM SCHOOLS OPEN SEPTEMBER 8." Courier-Journal (1869–1922), Aug 08, 1902, pp. 6.
- ^ "NEW CHURCH: THE FIRST ENGLISH LUTHERAN CONGREGATION TO BUILD HANDSOME AND IMPOSING STRUCTURE WILL BE ERECTED ON SITE OF THE PRESENT BUILDING." Courier-Journal (1869–1922), Jan 03, 1904, pp. 7
- ^ "April 9, 1933 (Page 22 of 46)." The Courier-Journal (1923–2001), Apr 09, 1933, pp. 22.
- ^ "LIGHTNING KILLS CATTLE ON TWO INDIANA FARMS." Courier-Journal (1869–1922), May 14, 1912, pp. 5.
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 25 March 1887, n. 3, p.30, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 25 June 1887, n. 9, p.85, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 25 Feb 1887, n. 1, p.14, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 25 Feb 1887, n. 1, p.14, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 25 Feb 1887, n. 1, p.14, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 25 June 1887, n. 9, p.87, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and News Record, v. 9 June 1887, n. 8, p.84, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and News Record, v. 9 June 1887, n. 8, p.84, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 25 June 1887, n. 9, p.85-86, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ Allison, Young Ewing. The City of Louisville and a Glimpse of Kentucky. United States, Committee on industrial and commercial improvement of the Louisville board of trade, 1887.
- ^ The Inland architect and News Record, v. 25 June 1887, n. 9, p.85, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 25 June 1887, n. 9, p.85, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 25 June 1887, n. 9, p.86, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ Article 1 – no Title." Courier-Journal (1869–1922), Mar 12, 1889, pp. 6.
- ^ Papers and Proceedings of the ... Annual Meeting of the American Library Association Held at .... United States, The Association, 1885.
- ^ ADDITIONAL SUBSCRIPTIONS." Courier-Journal (1869–1922), Jun 07, 1889, pp. 8.
- ^ Classified ad 2 – no title. (1897, Jan 17). Courier-Journal (1869–1922)
- ^ The Inland architect and news record (v. 18 Aug 1891 – Jan 1892). Chicago: Inland Pub. Co.
- ^ The Inland architect and news record (v. 18 Aug 1891 – Jan 1892). Chicago: Inland Pub. Co.
- ^ The Inland architect and news record (v. 18 Aug 1891 – Jan 1892). Chicago: Inland Pub. Co.
- ^ The Inland architect and news record (v. 18 Aug 1891 – Jan 1892). Chicago: Inland Pub. Co.
- ^ The Inland architect and news record (v. 18 Aug 1891 – Jan 1892). Chicago: Inland Pub. Co.
- ^ The Inland architect and news record (v. 18 Aug 1891 – Jan 1892). Chicago: Inland Pub. Co.
- ^ The Inland architect and news record (v. 21 Feb–July 1893). Chicago: Inland Pub. Co.
- ^ The Inland architect and news record (v. 21 Feb–July 1893). Chicago: Inland Pub. Co.
- ^ The Inland architect and news record (v. 21 Feb–July 1893). Chicago: Inland Pub. Co.
- ^ The Inland architect and news record (v. 21 Feb–July 1893). Chicago: Inland Pub. Co.
- ^ The Inland architect and news record (v. 21 Feb–July 1893). Chicago: Inland Pub. Co.
- ^ The Inland architect and news record (v. 21 Feb–July 1893). Chicago: Inland Pub. Co.
- ^ The Inland architect and news record (v. 21 Feb–July 1893). Chicago: Inland Pub. Co.
- ^ The Inland architect and news record (v. 22 Aug 1893 – Jan 1894). Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 22 Sept 1893, n. 2, p.XV, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record (v. 22 Aug 1893 – Jan 1894). Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record (v. 22 Aug 1893 – Jan 1894). Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record (v. 22 Aug 1893 – Jan 1894). Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record (v. 22 Aug 1893 – Jan 1894). Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record (v. 23 Aug 1894 – Jan 1895). Chicago: Inland Pub. Co.
- ^ The Inland architect and news record (v. 23 Aug 1894 – Jan 1895). Chicago: Inland Pub. Co.
- ^ The Inland architect and news record (v. 23 Aug 1894 – Jan 1895). Chicago: Inland Pub. Co.
- ^ STANDARD CLUB ADDITION: GROUND WILL BE BROKEN TO-DAY FOR THE HANDSOME NEW FRONT TO THE BUILDING. (1894, May 08).
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 25 Feb–July 1895, n. 4, p.85, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 25 Feb–July 1895, n. 4, p.84, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 25 Feb–July 1895, n. 4, p.84, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 25 Feb–July 1895, n. 4, p.85, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 25 Feb–July 1895, n. 4, p.85, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 25 Feb–July 1895, n. 4, p.85, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 25 Feb–July 1895, n. 4, p.84, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 25 Feb–July 1895, n. 4, p.85, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 25 Feb–July 1895, n. 4, p.85, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ The Inland architect and news record, v. 25 Feb–July 1895, n. 4, p.84-85, Chicago: Inland Pub. Co
- ^ NRHP reference No. 75001342 https://npgallery.nps.gov/AssetDetail/NRIS/75001342
- ^ Western architect and builder, v. 24 December 1907, n. 51, p.6, Powell & White.
- ^ Western architect and builder, v. 24 December 1907, n. 51, p.6, Powell & White.
- ^ The American Architect and Building News. United States, James R. Osgood & Company, 1907.
- ^ NEW TOBACCO FACTORY." Courier-Journal (1869–1922), Jan 06, 1898, pp. 8
- ^ "BIG STEMMING FACTORY: PERMIT ISSUED FOR A $19,000 BUILDING-- OTHER CITY HALL NEWS." Courier-Journal (1869–1922), Jul 07, 1898, pp. 10
- ^ "MAYOR PLEASED: ONE OF HIS PRINCIPAL HOPES REALIZED THINKS PASSING OF CHARTER AMENDMENTS WILL BRING GOOD RESULTS TO THIS CITY NOW FOR MORE FACTORIES." Courier-Journal (1869–1922), Mar 13, 1898, pp. 1.
- ^ Latham TK. Mason Maury and the Influence of the Chicago School in Louisville. 1975.
- ^ The Lather. XI. 1905–1906 p.227
- ^ American architect and building news. v.92 July–Dec. 1907 p.23.
- ^ American architect and architecture v.89 1906 Jan–Jun. 1907 p.23.
- ^ Industrial development and manufacturers' record c.1 v.52 1907–08
- ^ Manufacturers' record. v.46
- ^ Industrial development and manufacturers' record c.1 v.48 1905
- 1847 births
- 1919 deaths
- Irish people of French descent
- Architects from Louisville, Kentucky
- Architecture in Kentucky
- Fellows of the American Institute of Architects
- Architects from Kentucky
- Louisville Male High School alumni
- 19th-century American architects
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumni
- MIT School of Architecture and Planning alumni
- Western Association of Architects
- Burials at Cave Hill Cemetery
- Prairie School architects