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A 1908 postcard of Shadowbrook, built in 1893 for Anson Phelps Stokes who hired Frederick Law Olmsted to design the 900 acre grounds. H. (Henry) Neill Wilson (1855 in Glendale, Ohio – 1926 in Pittsfield, Massachusetts) was an architect with his father James Keys Wilson in Cincinnati, Ohio; on his own in Minneapolis, Minnesota; and for most of his career in Pittsfield, Massachusetts.
The village of Glendale is located in southwestern Ohio, about 15 miles (24 km) north of Cincinnati.Its historic core is an area of about 392 acres (159 ha), bounded roughly by Coral and Washington Avenues on the north, Springfield Pike (SR 4) on the west, Oak Street on the south, and South Troy Avenue on the east.
The Garber & Woodward firm's design for Withrow High School (1915–1919) at 2488 Madison Road in Hyde Park included "an agricultural section with conservatories and a poultry house, a manual-training shop, and a fine gymnasium" on a 30-acre (120,000 m 2) campus [2] Garber & Woodward "made the difficult challenge of a ravine across the front of the site into a dramatic asset by means of a ...
Glendale Police Station, also known as Council House and Jail, is a historic building in Glendale, Ohio. It was designed by architect H. Neill Wilson . It was listed in the National Register on March 27, 1975.
His first known individual design is the Church of the New Jerusalem, a board-and-batten Gothic Revival church built at Glendale in 1861. After serving with the Union army during the American Civil War, Mullett in 1863 relocated to Washington. He worked again with Rogers, since 1862 the de facto Supervising Architect at the Treasury Department.
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Glendale is a village in Hamilton County, Ohio, United States. The population was 2,298 at the 2020 census . It is a northern suburb of Cincinnati , and is the site of the Glendale Historic District .
Early 20th century photo of Plum Street Temple. James Keys Wilson (April 11, 1828 – October 21, 1894) was a prominent architect in Cincinnati, Ohio. [1] He studied with Charles A. Mountain in Philadelphia and then Martin E. Thompson and James Renwick in New York (Renwick designed the Smithsonian Museum), interning at Renwick's firm.