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Main article: Geoffrey Webb (artist) Webb's maker's mark, from a window in Holy Trinity Church, Coventry, West Midlands The Nativity window in St Nicholas' Church, Thames Ditton, Surrey The following is a list of the extant works of Geoffrey Fuller Webb (1879–1954), an English stained-glass artist and designer of church furnishings, based for most of his career in East Grinstead. He was a ...
Geoffrey Fuller Webb (5 August 1879 – 20 January 1954) [1] [2] was an English stained-glass artist and designer of church furnishings, based for most of his career in East Grinstead. He was a nephew of the architect Sir Aston Webb and a pupil of Charles Eamer Kempe and Sir Ninian Comper .
The great reading room on the fifth floor of Burton Barr Central Library, Phoenix Vertical circulation core containing three high-speed elevators. The Burton Barr Central Library is the central library of Phoenix, Arizona. It is the flagship location and administrative headquarters for the Phoenix Public Library.
The Flatiron Building, originally the Fuller Building, [6] is a 22-story, [7] 285-foot-tall (86.9 m) steel-framed triangular building at 175 Fifth Avenue in the Flatiron District neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City.
The Kennedy-Johnson campaign set up Phoenix headquarters here in 1960, Senator John F. Kennedy visited the building for its opening on August 29, 1960. [63] The building underwent renovations in the mid-1980s to turn it into an office building, the footprint was doubled and the building was modernized with glass cladding. 1960-10-19 [64]
The Burton Barr Central Library in Phoenix, Arizona, is a five-story, 280,000-square-foot (26,000 m 2) building that houses an open, one-acre (4,000 m 2) reading room and a single, central open core providing vertical circulation.
John E. G. Povey House, Portland, Oregon, home of one of the Povey Brothers. The company was founded by David Lincoln Povey, the son of English-born stained glass window maker Joseph Povey, who immigrated to the United States in 1848 and subsequently worked in stained glass in Philadelphia, New York City, and Newark, New Jersey.
Fuller applied for a United States patent on the Gilhoolie, identified as a "cam operated sliding jaw closure remover", in 1952, and the patent was granted in 1954. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Although Fuller held more than a dozen patents in the fields of dentistry and golf, the Gilhoolie patent was his only patent for a kitchen device.