Cleveland Architect Database
The Cleveland Architects Database is a listing of architects and master builders that have worked in Cleveland, since the 1820s and the buildings they designed here and abroad up to and including the 1970s. Sources include City of Cleveland Building Permits, professional publications including American Architect and Builder News, Inland Architect, Interstate Architect, the Ohio Architect and Builder, the Annals of Cleveland, the Plain Dealer, the Leader, the Press, Material Facts, the Bystander, and Cleveland Town Topics. Additional source material reviewed at the Cleveland Public Library Fine Arts Department, various books on Cleveland architecture, the American Institute of Architects Guide to Cleveland Architecture and a catalogue of architectural drawings maintained by the Western Reserve Historical Society were consulted. The Cleveland Necrology file maintained by the Cleveland Public Library, the United States Census, and Cleveland City Directories were reviewed in compiling accompanying biographies.
For this database, an architect is defined as anyone that identified himself or herself as an architect. Generally, these people had an office in the city or designed multiple structures here or in the immediate surrounding cities. This project began as a hobby by Robert Keiser over several years. Craig Bobby has researched many of the entries and donated photographs of those buildings. This is an ongoing project and will be updated on a regular basis. PLEASE NOTE: All entries have not been fully researched and require citations. Please confirm any unsourced entry
Architects
Reamer, Daniel (architect)
Biography
Reamer was the son of Oberlin merchant Chambers Reamer and his wife, the former Frances F. Cole, who married on May 5, 1868. They moved from Ohio to Birmingham in 1886, and also had a residence in Fort Payne. Daniel returned to his home town to attend classes at Oberlin College in the early 1890s. He moved to Chicago, Illinois in 1892 and worked for his uncle, Daniel P. Reamer, at the A. H. Andrews & Co. furniture store. In 1900 he helped organize a "T-Square Club" in Atlanta, Georgia. By 1901 he was operating an architectural practice in Birmingham. He relocated his practice to Chattanooga, Tennessee in June 1906 and assisted his father in the development of the "Reamer Place" residential neighborhood in Oberlin in 1908. Around 1909 he began practicing in Cleveland, Ohio, with his younger brother, Robert (best known as the designer of the Old Faithful Inn at Yellowstone National Park in 1904.)In 1924 Reamer returned south and resumed working in Birmingham and Chattanooga. He died in 1927.
Building Name | Address | Built | Status |
---|---|---|---|
Louis Meyers Residence | 16740 South Park Boulevard, Shaker Heights, OH | 1910 | Standing |
Stephen Thompson Residence | 2848 Hignland Avenue, Birmingham, AL | 1910 | Standing |
Store and Apartment Building for S. H. Kleinman Realty Company | 6705-09 Detroit Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1911 | Standing |
Apartment Building for Louis Duchon | 6929 Detroit Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1912 | Standing |
Residence for Burke Construction Co. | 2865 Brighton Road, Shaker Heights, OH | 1918 | Standing |
Residence for Fred Burke | 2924 Brighton Road, Shaker Heights, OH | 1922 | Standing |
Thomas Wesley Graham Residence | Oberlin, OH | 1923 | Standing |
Reeb, Jacob (architect)
Biography
J. Elmer Reeb was born in Zelienople, Pennsylvania. He studied architecture at the University of Pennsylvania, obtaining a certificate in 1913. Before working with Philip Small he was a designer with Rutan and Russell (1914-15), Lee and Hornbostel (1916), A. H. Good (1917-18), and Bohnard and Parson (1920-1). He joined Small and Rowley in 1922. He was a member of the firm of Small, Smith, & Reeb. He lived in Lakewood and later in Rocky River. He was married to Bertha (Endres) Reeb, who died in 1968, and was the father of one son, Jay.
Reese, James (architect)
Biography
James Reese was born in Brooklyn, New York. In 1917 he worked as a draftsman for the Austin Company. He was listed as an architect from 1928 until his death in 1944.
Building Name | Address | Built | Status |
---|---|---|---|
Residence | 2989 Glengary Road, Shaker Heights, OH | 1923 | Standing |
Residence | 2886 Kingsley Road, Shaker Heights, OH | 1927 | Standing |
Residence | 2917 Falmouth Road, Shaker Heights, OH | 1927 | Standing |
Residence | 3120 Kingsley Road, Shaker Heights, OH | 1927 | Standing |
Ashwood Apartments | 2828 South Moreland Boulevard, Cleveland, OH | 1928 | Standing |
Residence | 20001 South Woodland Road, Shaker Heights, OH | 1928 | Standing |
Chester Burke Residence | Unknown | 1929 | Standing |
Harris Burrows Residence | 2885 Carlton Road, Shaker Heights, OH | 1930 | Standing |
Apartments | 2661 North Moreland Boulevard, Cleveland, OH | 1936 | Standing |
Apartment Building | 2633 North Moreland Boulevard, Cleveland, OH | 1937 | Standing |
Sources
Cleveland City Directories
Cleveland Necrology File
WW I Draft Registration
Richardson & Thomas (firm)
Biography
This architectural firm was formed by architects Edward Richardson and Lewis Thomas and was in existence in 1903.
Sources
Book of Clevelanders, p. 220
Cleveland City Directories
Cleveland City Directories
Progressive Men of Northern Ohio, p.
Richardson & Watts (firm)
Biography
This architectural firm included Edward Richardson and William S. Watts and was in existence in 1905 and 1906.
Building Name | Address | Built | Status |
---|---|---|---|
Apartment Building on Olive Street | Olive Street, Cleveland, OH | 1905 | Demolished |
Cleveland Twist Drill | East 49th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1905 | Demolished |
Richardson & Yost (firm)
Biography
This architectural firm included Edward Richardson and Arthur Yost and was in business from 1913 to 1918. Their offices were in the Rockefeller Building.
Building Name | Address | Built | Status |
---|---|---|---|
Office Building and Theatre | 15511 Waterloo Road, Cleveland, OH | 1914 | Standing |
Heights Center Building | 12429 Cedar Road, Cleveland Heights, OH | 1916 | Standing |
Laundry | 3940 Superior Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1917 | Demolished |
Mechanics Laundry | Lexington and East 47th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1917 | Demolished |
Residence for Clarence Huber | Lakewood, OH | 1917 | Unknown |
Residence for D. J. Murphy | Lakewood, OH | 1917 | Unknown |
Richardson, Edward (architect)
Biography
Edward Richardson was the son of architect John N. Richardson of the firm of Cudell and Richardson. He was educated in Cleveland schools, the Spencerian Business College, and Case School of Applied Science. He worked with his father from 1897-9. He was general superintendent of sewer construction from 1900-1. He was then engaged in general practice of architecture and engineering. He formed several different partnerships, including Richardson and Thomas in 1903, Richardson and Watts 1905-6, and Richardson and Yost 1913-8. He was a commissioned officer in the Corps of Engineers from 1900 to 1905. He was a well-known yachtsman. He was a member of the Ellsworth Blue Lodge Masons, the Al Koran Temple, and the Cleveland Chapter of the American Institute of Architects.
Building Name | Address | Built | Status |
---|---|---|---|
Masonic Temple | Canton, OH | 1903 | Demolished |
Winton Motor Factory | 10406 Berea Road, Cleveland, OH | 1903 | Demolished |
Winton Motor Carriage | Huron Road, Cleveland, OH | 1904 | Demolished |
Sources
Book of Clevelanders, p. 220
Cleveland City Directories
Progressive Men of Northern Ohio, p.
Richardson, John (architect)
Biography
John N. Richardson was born in Perth, Scotland and immigrated to the United States, settling in Cleveland. He entered the office of J. M. Blackburn in 1868 and into partnership with Frank Cudell in 1871. That partnership lasted until 1890 when Cudell left the firm. Richardson continued to practice by himself. He designed several important industrial structures throughout the city, including the Woodland Avenue Street Railroad Powerhouse (now the Powerhouse at Nautica), the W. S. Tyler Wire Works, and the Broadway Mills Company Warehouse. His son, Edward Richardson, and William Jansen worked in his office in the later years of his career. He lived south of downtown on West 14th Street in Tremont. He died in 1902 of pneumonia after a short illness.
Building Name | Address | Built | Status |
---|---|---|---|
W. S. Tyler Wire Works | 1383 East 36th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1890 | Standing |
Addition to Commercial Buidling for Webb - Ball | 238-242 West Superior Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1891 | Demolished |
Alteration to Roseman Apartments | 1618-24 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1891 | Demolished |
Charles Gentsch Residence | 2826 Franklin Boulevard, Cleveland, OH | 1891 | Standing |
Jefferson Block for Ann Walworth | 2318-30 Ontario Street, Cleveland, OH | 1891 | Demolished |
Office for Schneider & Trenkamp | Cleveland, OH | 1891 | Demolished |
Passenger Depot for the Cleveland City Cable Railway Company | 1125 West 9th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1891 | Demolished |
Printing House for J. B. Savage | 1395 East 3rd Street, Cleveland, OH | 1891 | Demolished |
Samuel Sessions Residence | 2281 West 14th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1891 | Demolished |
School for Jewish Orphan Asylum | 4900 Woodland Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1891 | Demolished |
Addition to Scottish Rite Temple | 1447-53 East 6th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1892 | Demolished |
Car Barn and Machine Shop for the Woodland & West Side Railway Company | 9822 Lorain Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1892 | Demolished |
Eben J. Carter Residence Addition | 4107-9 Franklin Boulevard, Cleveland, OH | 1892 | Standing |
George L. Dake Residence | 1886 East 75th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1892 | Demolished |
Gymnasium addition to Cleveland Athletic Club | 1501 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1892 | Demolished |
Woodland Avenue and West Side Railway Powerhouse | 2000 Sycamore Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1892 | Standing |
Addition to Powerhouse for Cleveland City Cable Railroad Company | 1435 East 49th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1893 | Standing |
Lithograph Building addition 4 stories brick and stone | 220-6 St. Clair Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1893 | Demolished |
William North Residence | 2266 West 14th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1893 | Demolished |
Broadway Mills Company | 300 Central Viaduct, Cleveland, OH | 1894 | Demolished |
Commercial Residential Building for Franklin Clark | 1213 Prospect Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1894 | Standing |
Commercial-Residential Building for Dr. Herrick | East 9th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1894 | Demolished |
The Clark Commercial-Residential Building for Dr. Franklin H. Clark | 1213 Prospect Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1894 | Standing |
W. S. Tyler Co. Carriage Repository | Prospect Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1894 | Demolished |
W. S. Tyler Company addition | 1387-95 East 36th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1894 | Standing |
Cleveland World Building | 1302 Ontario Street, Cleveland, OH | 1895 | Demolished |
Cleveland Yacht Club Clubhouse | Cleveland, OH | 1895 | Demolished |
Commercial-Residential Building for Louis Keiper | 2516-8 Detroit Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1895 | Demolished |
Four Story Brick Factory | Woodland and Maple, Cleveland, OH | 1895 | Demolished |
Residence for Mary Gilbert and Julia Davis | 5008 Gladstone Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1895 | Demolished |
Alteration of barn to residence | 3801 Franklin Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1896 | Standing |
Alteration of single family house to multi - family | 3805 Franklin Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1896 | Standing |
Chafer and Becker Building | 431-7 Champlain, Cleveland, OH | 1896 | Demolished |
Commercial - residential building for the Detroit Street Improvement Company | 2606 - 14 Detroit Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1896 | Demolished |
Commercial Building for Fred Bieber | 3039 Woodland Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1896 | Demolished |
Manufacturing Building for Chafer & Becker | Unknown | 1896 | Demolished |
School, Hall, Convent for St. Peter Church | 1544 East 18th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1896 | Demolished |
Seymour Block alterations and repairs | 2513 Detroit Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1896 | Standing |
Abby Apartments for John Kilfoyl | 6712 Carnegie Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1897 | Demolished |
Detroit Block | 2520 Detroit Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1897 | Demolished |
Ernest Mueller Residence | 1456 West 101st Street, Cleveland, OH | 1897 | Demolished |
Factory for W. S. Tyler Company Wire Works | 1393 East 36th Street rear, Cleveland, OH | 1897 | Standing |
Alteration and addition to Clubhouse to make Wyandot Apartment House for William Cleminshaw & John Kilfoyle | 1103 Huron Road, Cleveland, OH | 1898 | Demolished |
Alterations to Graves Building | East 4th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1898 | Standing |
Apartment House | NS Huron cor Short Alley, Cleveland, OH | 1898 | Demolished |
Apartment House | Jennings and Branch, Cleveland, OH | 1898 | Standing |
Cleveland Twist Drill | 4808 Lakeside Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1898 | Standing |
Residence for Benjamin Woods | 1002 Fairfield Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1898 | Standing |
Residence for Willis J. Holden | 1804 East 93rd Street, Cleveland, OH | 1898 | Standing |
W. J. Holden Residence | Amesbury near Hough, Cleveland, OH | 1898 | Demolished |
Acme Machine Company | NE Corner St. Clair & East 45th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1899 | Demolished |
Addition to Little Sisters of the Poor Home for the Aged Poor | 2507 East 22nd Street, Cleveland, OH | 1899 | Demolished |
Ohio Baking Company | 1506 Superior Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1899 | Demolished |
Ohio Baking Company addition | 768 Superior Ave (1900), Cleveland, OH | 1899 | Demolished |
Sherwin Williams Company | 100 Canal Street, Cleveland, OH | 1899 | Demolished |
St. Joseph's Catholic Church steeple | Woodland Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1899 | Demolished |
Factory for W. S. Tyler Company | 1403 East 36th Street rear, Cleveland, OH | 1899-1900 | Standing |
Boiler House for Acme Machine Company | 4536 Hamilton Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1900 | Demolished |
Car Barn for Cleveland City Railway Company | 1769 Ansel Road, Cleveland, OH | 1900 | Demolished |
Theodor Kundtz Residence | 13826 Lake Avenue, Lakewood, OH | 1900 | Demolished |
Apartment building for W. Cleminshaw | 954 East Madison, Cleveland, OH | 1901 | Demolished |
Brick foundry for E.S. Griffiths | Hamilton near Kirtland, Cleveland, OH | 1901 | Demolished |
Office and Waiting Room for Cleveland City Railway Company | 10200 Hough Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1901 | Demolished |
Oscar Balzer Residence | 1706 Holmden Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1901 | Standing |
Townsend Residence | Chagrin Falls, OH | 1901 | Demolished |
Turner Worsted Company | 1817 Central Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1901 | Demolished |
Addition to St. Alexis Hospital | 5163 Broadway, Cleveland, OH | 1902 | Demolished |
K. D. Box Company and Label | 1390-1400 East 30th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1902 | Standing |
The Helberta | 9706 Madison Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1902 | Demolished |
Winton Motor Carriage Company | Berea Road, Cleveland, OH | 1903 | Demolished |
Alexander Winton Residence | 12908 Lake Avenue, Lakewood, OH | n.d. | Demolished |
Sources
Cleveland City Directories
Member AIA - 1894 Directory
Image Source(s): Donald Petit, Craig Bobby
Robinson & Miller (firm)
Robinson, Alexander (architect)
Biography
Alexander Robinson was born in Sewickley, Pennsylvania. He received a bachelor's degree from Princeton University and a bachelor's degree in architecture from Columbia University in 1917. He practiced in Pittsburgh from 1919 until 1920 when he came to Cleveland to work in the office of Abram Garfield. In 1926 he became a partner in the firm of Garfield, Harris, Robinson and Schaefer, a forerunner of Westlake, Reed, Leskosky. He was appointed to the National Capitol Planning Commission by President Dwight Eisenhower. From 1964 to 1975 he was a member of the Joint Committee on Landmarks in Washington, D.C. and from 1962 to 1971 was a member of Cleveland's Fine Arts Advisory Committee. He was a fellow in the American Institute of Architects, serving as national secretary from 1943 to 1947. He was also president of the local chapter of the American Institute of Architects from 1935 to 1937, a member of the Cuyahoga County Planning Commission, a trustee of the Cleveland Institute of Art, the Musical Arts Association, and the Cleveland Music School Settlement. He won the Cleveland Arts Prize in 1975 and was inducted into the Cleveland Engineering Society Hall of Fame.
Sources
Alexander Robinson III, dean of Cleveland's architects; Plain Dealer; February 13, 1985
Rowley, Charles (architect)
Biography
Charles Bacon Rowley was born in Springfield, Ohio and went to high school in Jackson, Michigan. He attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, graduating in 1912. He moved to Cleveland in 1920 establishing the firm of Small and Rowley. That firm was dissolved in 1928 when the firm of Charles Bacon Rowley and Associates was created. From 1957 until 1972 he worked with Ernest Payer, first with the firm Rowley, Payer, Huffman & Leithold (1962-9) and then with Rowley, Payer, Huffman & Caldwell (1969-1972). He was the Vice President of the Shaker Heights School Board. He resided at 2889 Weymouth Road in Shaker Heights and his office was in the Keith Building downtown. He was listed as a registered architect in the November 1940 Ohio Architect. He retired to Harwich Port, Massachusetts in 1976 and died in Hyannis, Massachusetts in 1984.
Building Name | Address | Built | Status |
---|---|---|---|
E. S. Patterson Residence | Shaker Heights, OH | 1930 | Demolished |
Ferro Enamel House | 2077 Campus Road, South Euclid, OH | 1932 | Standing |
Wheeling Steel House | 6 Oakmount, Wheeling, WV | 1933 | Standing |
Newell Bolton Residence | Mentor, OH | 1938 | Unknown |
Beachland Presbyterian Church | 18100 Canterbury Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1949 | Standing |
Mayfield Country Club | 1545 Sheridan Road, South Euclid, OH | 1949 | Standing |
Clifton Club | 17884 Lake Road, Lakewood, OH | 1950 | Standing |
Lewis Hall | Kenyon College, Kenyon, OH | 1953 | Standing |
Norton Hall | Kenyon College, Kenyon, OH | 1953 | Standing |
Watson Hall | Kenyon College, Kenyon, OH | 1956 | Standing |
Cleveland Public Library � Main Library Annex | Superior Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1959 | Demolished |
Cleveland Public Library � Woodland Branch | 5806 Woodland Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1971 | Standing |
Sources
Ed. Van Tassel, David and John J. Grabowski; Dictionary of Cleveland Biography Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1996
Who's Who in Ohio1930 ; p.110 - 111
Rudolph, George (architect)
Biography
George E. Rudolph was active as a Cleveland architect from 1906 to 1938. He was listed as a registered architect in the November 1940 Ohio Architect. In 1920 he was living in at 242 Florida Avenue in Youngstown. He would return to Cleveland by 1928. He died at Elyria Memorial Hospital.
Building Name | Address | Built | Status |
---|---|---|---|
Commercial Building for Jacob Epstein | 4600-2 Superior Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1908 | Standing |
Tenement for B. Englehart | 2532 Carnegie Ave, Cleveland, OH | 1909 | Demolished |
Tenement for Levatter & Zalkinder | 1431 East 66th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1909 | Standing |
Apartment building for I.M. Margolin | 6917 Detroit Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1911 | Standing |
Apartment building for M.J. Weinberger | 11003 Clifton Boulevard, Cleveland, OH | 1911 | Standing |
Apartment building for S. Kosen | 10824 Tacoma, Cleveland, OH | 1911 | Standing |
Apartment building for Sam Greenberg | 6207-9 Kinsman, Cleveland, OH | 1911 | Demolished |
Apartment building for Sam Greenberg | 6211-3 Kinsman, Cleveland, OH | 1911 | Demolished |
Apartment building for Thomas Arnoff | 500 East 117th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1911 | Demolished |
Commercial - residential building for Joseph Goldstein | 6804-6 Detroit Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1911 | Standing |
Commercial building for Joseph Goldstein | 6810-4 Detroit Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1911 | Standing |
Commercial-residential Building | 1004-8 East 105th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1911 | Demolished |
Double Dwelling | 2134 West 59th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1911 | Demolished |
Double Dwelling | 2138 West 59th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1911 | Demolished |
Double Dwelling | 2140 West 59th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1911 | Demolished |
Double Dwelling | 2144 West 59th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1911 | Demolished |
Double Dwelling | 2146 West 59th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1911 | Demolished |
Four family residence | 499 East 117th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1911 | Demolished |
Apartments for I. Newman | 1562 East 93rd Street, Cleveland, OH | 1912 | Demolished |
Commercial Building for A.E. Goldman | 5813-23 Quincy Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1913 | Demolished |
Aoartment Building | 760 East 90th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1917 | Demolished |
Apartment Building | 2494 East 61st Street, Cleveland, OH | 1917 | Demolished |
Apartment building | 799 Eddy Road, Cleveland, OH | 1917 | Demolished |
Apartment building for J. Arnoff | 2741-9 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1917 | Demolished |
Apartment building for M. Cullman | 2431 East 49th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1917 | Demolished |
Apartments for A. Jania | 9322 Lowell Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1917 | Demolished |
Apartments for B. Tellinger | 13602 Glenside, Cleveland, OH | 1917 | Demolished |
Apartments for Mamberg and Horwitz | 8202 Force Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1917 | Standing |
Two apartment buildings for Clair Doan Building Company | Clairdoan Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1917 | Demolished |
Commercial Building for A.E. Goldman | 15314 Waterloo Road, Cleveland, OH | 1925 | Demolished |
Remodel Store for Lubritorium | 2104 Lorain Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1932 | Demolished |
Sources
Cleveland City Directories
Cleveland City Directories 1906-1938
WWI Draft Registration
Ruprecht, Edward (architect)
Biography
Edward P. Ruprecht was active as an architect in Cleveland from the late 1880s until 1891. His office was in the Kendal Building and he lived on West 83rd Street in West Cleveland. He was employed in the office of architect Nevins Charlot. He left Cleveland in 1891.
Building Name | Address | Built | Status |
---|---|---|---|
Charles W. Norman Residence | 2254 East 89th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1887 | Standing |
Cleveland Rubber Company Office Building | Cleveland, OH | 1887 | Demolished |
D. E. Wheaton Residence | 1958 East 101st Street, Cleveland, OH | 1887 | Demolished |
Hawley and Langton Block | 4904-8 Woodland Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1887 | Demolished |
Landon School | Unknown | 1887 | Demolished |
Residence for Philip Lehr | 5236 Lorain Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1887 | Standing |
Smith Clampitt Residence | 2210 East 89th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1887 | Standing |
Carrie Seager Residence | 1753 East 65th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1888 | Demolished |
Commercial Building | 5363-5 Broadway, Cleveland, OH | 1888 | Demolished |
Commercial-Residential Building for Charlotte Scheuer | 2527-9 St. Clair Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1888 | Demolished |
Commercial-Residential Building for Henry Shafer | 4943-53 Woodland Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1888 | Demolished |
Double Residence for Willard Nutt | 5517-9 Curtis, Cleveland, OH | 1888 | Demolished |
Double Residence for William Nutt | 1895-9 East 55th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1888 | Demolished |
Double Residence for William Nutt | 1901-5 East 55th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1888 | Demolished |
Residence for Robinson Brothers | 2517 Bridge Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1888 | Demolished |
Residence of Frank Hurd, Esq. | 7513 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1888 | Demolished |
Comercial Building for Conrad Kempf | 5449 Broadway, Cleveland, OH | 1889 | Demolished |
Terrace for Henry Shafer | 2583 Shafer Court, Cleveland, OH | 1889 | Demolished |
Commercial-Residential Building for Conrad Kempf | 2607-9 Lorain Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1890 | Demolished |
Commercial-Residential Building for Henry and Laura Hower | 10400-12 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1890 | Demolished |
Collamer High School | Cleveland, OH | n.d. | Demolished |
Engine House #15 | East Side of Cuyahoga, Cleveland, OH | n.d. | Demolished |
Marr's Block | Cleveland, OH | n.d. | Demolished |
Stone's Block | Cleveland, OH | n.d. | Demolished |
Warren High School | Warren, OH | n.d. | Demolished |
Sources
Cleveland City Directories
Russell, John (architect)
Biography
John W. Russell was an English-born architect who came to Cleveland in 1866. He was the son of builder Henry Russell. He returned to England studying under James Garry, a noted architect, and at the Cooper School in London. He returned to Cleveland and worked as a draftsman for architect John Eisenmann where he designed several industrial buildings and houses. He is buried in Woodland Cemetery.
Building Name | Address | Built | Status |
---|---|---|---|
Residence for Patrick O'Reilly | 2314 Mulberry, Cleveland, OH | 1889 | Demolished |
Newton M. Anderson Residence | 1916 East 71st Street, Cleveland, OH | 1892 | Demolished |
Brick and Wood Foundry for Cartland Foundry Company | Unknown | 1893 | Demolished |
Residence for Dr. Jamin Strong | 2044 East 69th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1894 | Demolished |
Residence for William Lettridge | 1780 East 89th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1894 | Demolished |
Nine Houses on Alabama and Hamilton | Alabama and Hamilton, Cleveland, OH | 1895 | Demolished |
Residence for Patrick Behan | 9908 Lamont, Cleveland, OH | 1897 | Demolished |
H. E. Teachout Residence | 2209 East 46th Street, Cleveland, OH | n.d. | Demolished |
Iron Clad Paint Company | 535-41 Seneca, Cleveland, OH | n.d. | Demolished |
John E. Ensign Residence | 1830 East 63rd Street, Cleveland, OH | n.d. | Demolished |
Lutheran Congregational School | Cleveland, OH | n.d. | Unknown |
Palmer and DeMooy Company Foundry | Leonard & Winter, Cleveland, OH | n.d. | Demolished |
Prof C. A. Mitchell Residence | 462 Giddings, Cleveland, OH | n.d. | Demolished |
Prof N. M. Anderson Residence | 842 Willson, Cleveland, OH | n.d. | Demolished |
Residence of J. D. Burton | Cleveland, OH | n.d. | Demolished |
Rev H. C. Hayden Residence | 1599 Euclid, Cleveland, OH | n.d. | Demolished |
Shops of the Cleveland and Canton Railroads | Canton, OH | n.d. | Unknown |
Taylor and Boggs Foundry | 521-41 Seneca #2 CPRR Near Euclid, Cleveland, OH | n.d. | Demolished |
William Taylor Residence | Cleveland, OH | n.d. | Unknown |
Sources
Cleveland City Directories
Cleveland Necrology file
Cleveland, The Forest City Illustrated (1893) p. 122
Rust, Add W. (architect)
Biography
Born Add W. Rust, May of 1865, he spent his early life and much of his later life in Lake County. Rust first appears in Cleveland City Directories in 1888 (as a stenographer), and in 1890 he first appears as an architect. In 1892, the firm was called A. W. Rust & Bro. and included his brother Truman H. Rust. The firm later became known as the A. W. Rust Company. His brother Elisha Rust was one of the principals. He designed the original Beehive School for Warrensville Township in 1916.
Building Name | Address | Built | Status |
---|---|---|---|
A. W. Rust Residence | 1945 East 69th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1891 | Demolished |
Boarding House for Charles C. Crumb | 5115-9 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1891 | Demolished |
Residence for John C. Alexander | 4073 East 71st Street, Cleveland, OH | 1891 | Demolished |
Residence for Susan Morgan | 1953 East 69th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1891 | Demolished |
Asa Adams Residence | 1928 East 69th Street, Cleveland, OH | 1892 | Demolished |
Residence for Harry L. Sterling | 8508 Cedar Avenue, Cleveland, OH | 1892 | Demolished |
Beehive School | 4345 Lee Road, Cleveland, OH | 1916 | Demolished |
Ruth, Huddle, White and Howe (firm)
Ruth, Paul (architect)
Sources
Obituary, Architecture Cleveland, January, 2000, AIA Cleveland