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George Franklin Barber

George Franklin Barber (July 31, 1854 – February 17, 1915) was an American architect known for the house designs he marketed worldwide through mail-order catalogs. Barber was one of the most successful residential architects of the late Victorian period in the United States,[4] and his plans were used for houses in all 50 U.S. states, and in nations as far away as Japan and the Philippines.[4] Over four dozen Barber houses are individually listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and several dozen more are listed as part of historic districts.[5]

George F. Barber
ca. 1910
Born
George Franklin Barber

(1854-07-31)July 31, 1854[1]
DiedFebruary 17, 1915(1915-02-17) (aged 60)[1]
Resting placeGreenwood Cemetery, Knoxville[1]
OccupationArchitect
SpouseLaura Cheney[2]
ChildrenCharles, George, Jr., Laura[2]
Parent(s)Lyman and Cornelia Barber[3]

Barber began designing houses in his native DeKalb, Illinois, in the late 1880s, before permanently moving his base to Knoxville, Tennessee, in 1888. His first widely circulated catalog, Cottage Souvenir No. 2, contained designs and floor plans for 59 houses, mostly in the Queen Anne style, as well as Barber's architectural philosophy and tips for homebuilders. Later catalogs contained more Colonial designs.[4] By the time his catalog business ended in 1908, Barber had sold upwards of 20,000 plans.[4]

Barber was the father of Charles I. Barber (1887–1962), who became a successful architect in his own right and designed several notable buildings in the Knoxville area during the first half of the 20th century.[4] BarberMcMurry, an architectural firm cofounded by Charles Barber in 1915, still operates in Knoxville.[6]

Biography edit

Early life and career edit

 
The Charles E. Bradt House, one of Barber's first designs

Barber was born in DeKalb, Illinois, in 1854, the son of Lyman and Cornelia Spring Barber.[3] While still a young child, he moved to Marmaton, Kansas, where he lived on the farm of his sister, Olive, and her husband, William Barrett.[4] By the 1870s, he owned an adjacent farm, where he raised plants which he advertised as "ornamental nursery stock."[4] During this period, he learned architecture through mail-order books, namely George Palliser's American Cottage Homes and technical books published by A.J. Bicknell and Company.[3] In 1884, Barber patented a nail-holding attachment for hammers.[4]

By the mid-1880s, Barber was back in DeKalb, where he produced his first architectural designs working for his brother's construction firm, Barber and Boardman, Contractors and Builders.[3] In 1887 or early 1888, Barber published The Cottage Souvenir, crudely produced on punched card stock and tied together with a piece of yarn, which contained 14 house plans (a revised edition published shortly afterward contained 18).[4][7] The earliest buildings constructed from Barber's designs include the Charles E. Bradt House (1887) and the Congregational Church (1888), both in DeKalb.[4] The Bradt house was featured in the March 1888 issue of Carpentry and Building.[8]

Catalog business edit

 
The Charles and Anna Drain House (Drain Castle), built in Drain, Oregon between 1893 and 1895.

In late 1888, Barber relocated to Knoxville, Tennessee, in hopes that the city's mountainous climate would be better for his declining health.[4] He briefly partnered with Minnesota-born architect Martin Parmalee, but the partnership proved unsatisfactory.[4] In 1892, he established a firm with one of his clients, J.C. White, handling the firm's business aspects.[4] Barber also became a partner in the Edgewood Land Improvement Company, which was developing a suburb east of Knoxville known as Park City (modern Parkridge).[4][9] He designed over a dozen houses for this suburb, including his own house, which still stands at 1635 Washington Avenue, and the W.O. Haworth and F.E. McArthur houses, which still stand on Washington and Jefferson Avenues and appeared in some of Barber's catalogs.[10]

In 1890, Barber published The Cottage Souvenir No. 2, which contained 59 house plans, as well as plans for 2 barns, a chapel, a church, 2 storefronts, and several pavilions.[4] This catalog and its subsequent revisions led to an explosion in orders for Barber's firm. Barber houses built during this period include the Jeremiah Nunan House in Jacksonville, Oregon,[11] the Donnelly House in Mount Dora, Florida,[4] and the J. Hawkins Hart House in Henderson, Kentucky,[12] all of which still stand and are listed on the National Register. He also remained active on a local level in Knoxville, with the Romanesque-inspired Isaac Ziegler House on 4th Avenue,[13] and a house built for his printer, S.B. Newman, which still stands in Old North Knoxville.[10]

 
William H. Baker House (The Gables) in Winchester, Virginia, built in 1899

Around 1895, Barber parted ways with White and formed a new firm with a new partner, Thomas Kluttz.[3] That year, Barber began publishing a magazine, American Homes, which advertised the firm's latest house plans, offered tips on landscaping and interior design, and published a multi-part history of architecture by Louisville architect Charles Hite-Smith.[4] In 1896, the growing firm moved into the Barber-designed French and Roberts Building on Gay Street, with the firm's 30 draftsmen and 20 secretaries occupying an entire floor.[4]

Later career edit

In the late 1890s and early 1900s, Barber designed several elaborate mansions for affluent businessmen, including the home of Carroll Lathrop Post (brother of C. W. Post) in Battle Creek, Michigan;[4] the home of tobacco magnate R. J. Reynolds in Winston-Salem, North Carolina;[3] the home of People's Bank president N.E. Graham in East Brady, Pennsylvania;[4] and one of his grandest designs, the $40,000 "Mount Athos" for Barboursville, Virginia, tycoon Walter G. Newman.[14]

In the early 1900s, Barber began to phase out his mail-order business and with the help of his brother, Manly, focused on Knoxville-area building projects.[3] He later worked with architects R. F. Graf and John Ryno.[9][15] The publication of American Homes was moved to New York in 1902, though Barber remained a regular contributor for several years afterward.[4] The catalog business was suspended in 1908.[4] Barber died on February 17, 1915, and is interred with his family in Knoxville's Greenwood Cemetery.[1]

Works edit

 
The Queen Anne-style I.W.P. Buchanan House in Lebanon, Tennessee

The bulk of Barber's business followed the "catalog architecture" model popularized by earlier architects such as Palliser, Palliser & Company. Barber's great innovation was his willingness to personalize his designs for individual clients at moderate cost.[4] As he wrote in his Cottage Souvenir No. 2, "Write to us concerning any changes wanted in plans, and keep writing till you get what you want. Don't be afraid of writing too often. We are not easily offended."[4] Though his firms' records no longer survive, it is believed that he sold as many as 20,000 plans in his career.[4] Since he frequently modified his designs to fit his clients' needs and specifications, his houses are sometimes difficult to attribute with any certainty.[16]

In discussing his architectural philosophy, Barber argued that nature has "faithfully and accurately adhered to the Divine law of harmony,"[17] and that no place should adhere more closely to the fundamental principles of nature than one's house.[17] Barber considered proportion the most important element in architecture, likening it to harmony in music, "without which all else is a failure."[17] He described ornamentation as the next most important element, as it gives proportion expression. Lastly was "harmony of form," or the relationship of curved and straight lines to one another.[17]

 
The Robert Covington House in Hazlehurst, Mississippi, one of Barber's later designs

Barber's early designs were modified versions of the Queen Anne style, which Barber liked to enrich with the addition of Romanesque elements.[4] Barber houses constructed in this period are characterized by features such imposing turrets, projecting windows, verandas flanked by circular pavilions, and Syrian arches.[4] In the latter half of the 1890s, Barber began to offer more plans in the Colonial Revival style.[4] These were often characterized by projecting porticos supported by large columns, symmetrical facades, and flat decks with balustrades. Later Barber catalogs contained Bungalow and Craftsman styles, though few of these were built.[4]

Some have suggested that Barber was the first to sell prefabricated houses in crates, but there is no evidence that he was actually engaged in manufacturing.[4] While he occasionally supplied builders with manufactured windows, doors, staircases and other components, and millwork companies advertised in Barber's magazine, it is unclear whether entire houses were sold as kits by anyone prior to 1900.[4]

Barber houses today edit

 
The John Owings House in Laurens, South Carolina

A revived interest in Barber's work began in the 1970s,[4] and since then, hundreds of houses built using his plans have been identified. Over four dozen of these have been individually listed on the National Register of Historic Places for their architecture, and several dozen more have been listed as contributing properties in historic districts.[5] At least four Barber houses—the Isaac Ziegler House, the Jeremiah Nunan House, the John Calvin Owings House (Laurens, South Carolina), and Roselawn (Natchitoches, Louisiana)— =have been documented by the Historic American Buildings Survey.[11][13][18][19]

Many extant Barber houses are still used as residences, while others house museums, bed and breakfasts, and office space. Barber houses have provided inspiration for Christmas cards, wall hangings, and at least one dollhouse model.[4] While most of Barber's work was domestic, several notable non-domestic Barber-designed buildings survive. These include the Congregational Church (now DeKalb Foursquare Church) in DeKalb, Illinois;[4] the Raper Building in Lexington, North Carolina;[20] and Bartlett Hall at Maryville College.[21]

Bibliography edit

Catalogs edit

  • Modern Artistic Cottages, or The Cottage Souvenir, Designed to Meet the Wants of Mechanics and Home Builders (c. 1887–1888)
  • The Cottage Souvenir No. 2: Containing 120 Original Designs in Cottage and Detail Architecture (1891)
  • The Cottage Souvenir Revised and Enlarged: Containing Over Two Hundred Original Designs and Plans of Artistic Dwellings (1892)
  • Artistic Homes: How to Plan and How to Built Them (1895)
  • New Model Dwellings and How Best to Build Them: Containing a Great Variety of Designs, Plans and Interior Views of Modern Dwellings (c. 1896)
  • Modern Dwellings and Their Proper Construction: A Book of Practical Designs and Information for Those Who Wish to Build and Beautify Their Homes (1899)
  • Art in Architecture: With the Modern Architectural Designer for Those who Wish to Build or Beautify Their Homes (c. 1902–1903)
  • American Homes: A Book of Everything for Those who are Planning to Build or Beautify Their Homes (1907)

Magazines edit

  • American Homes: A Journal Devoted to Planning, Building, and Beautifying the Home (1895–1902; published by Charles Hite-Smith, 1902–1904)

Other edit

  • Appreciation (1896)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d George Franklin Barber at Findagrave.com. Retrieved: 3 May 2011.
  2. ^ a b East Tennessee Historical Society, Lucile Deaderick (ed.), Heart of the Valley: A History of Knoxville, Tennessee (Knoxville, Tenn.: East Tennessee Historical Society, 1976), pp. 491-492.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g M. Ruth Little (2009). Barber, George F. (1854-1915), North Carolina Architects and Builders, A Biographical Dictionary. Website maintained by North Carolina State University Libraries. Accessed May 3, 2011.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah Michael Tomlan, Introduction to George F. Barber's Victorian Cottage Architecture: An American Catalog of Designs, 1891 (Dover Publications, 2004), pp. v-xvi.
  5. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  6. ^ BarberMcMurry - History 2011-07-25 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved: 3 May 2011.
  7. ^ Barber & McMurry Architects 2009-06-28 at the Wayback Machine, Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture, accessed July 18, 2010
  8. ^ Carpentry and Building, Vol. 10 (March 1888), p. 50. Downloaded from Google Books, 3 May 2011.
  9. ^ a b Ann Bennett, National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form for Park City Historic District, 22 June 1990.
  10. ^ a b Knox Heritage, George Barber Homes Trolley Tour Booklet 2011-07-26 at the Wayback Machine, 2007. Retrieved: 1 May 2011.
  11. ^ a b Marion Ross and Christopher Owens, Historic American Buildings Survey for Jeremiah Nunan House, 1971. Retrieved: 1 May 2011.
  12. ^ Rachel Alexander, National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form for J. Hawkins Hart House 2010-12-01 at the Wayback Machine, 1 October 2010. Retrieved: 1 May 2011.
  13. ^ a b Joseph Herndon, Historic American Buildings Survey for Isaac Ziegler House, 1974. Retrieved: 1 May 2011.
  14. ^ Jeff O'Dell, John Salmon, and Randolph Turner, National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form for Madison-Barbour Rural Historic District, December 1989, Section 7, pp. 33-34. Retrieved: 3 May 2011.
  15. ^ Ann Bennett, National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form for Stratford, 23 March 2009.
  16. ^ Ann Bennett, Historic and Architectural Resources in Knoxville and Knox County, Tennessee, May 1994, Sec. 7, p. 51. Retrieved: 2 May 2011.
  17. ^ a b c d George F. Barber, Victorian Cottage Architecture: An American Catalog of Designs (Dover Publications, 2004), pp. 3-7.
  18. ^ Nancy Pittenger and Tracy Power, Historic American Buildings Survey - John Calvin Owings House, 1988. Retrieved: 1 May 2011.
  19. ^ Cane River National Heritage Area Committee, Historic American Buildings Survey - Roselawn, c. 2004. Retrieved: 1 May 2011.
  20. ^ Uptown Lexington, Inc., Historic Uptown Lexington, North Carolina - A Heritage Tour 2009-09-02 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved: 2 May 2011.
  21. ^ Tennessee Civil War National Heritage Area, The National Heritage Area Program and Blount County, Tennessee: A Feasibility Study 2013-09-30 at the Wayback Machine, p. 13. Retrieved: 2 May 2011.

External links edit

  • The George F. Barber Collection at the Calvin M. McClung Historical Collection — contains portraits, old advertisements, and digital copies of some of Barber's catalogs and magazines

george, franklin, barber, july, 1854, february, 1915, american, architect, known, house, designs, marketed, worldwide, through, mail, order, catalogs, barber, most, successful, residential, architects, late, victorian, period, united, states, plans, were, used. George Franklin Barber July 31 1854 February 17 1915 was an American architect known for the house designs he marketed worldwide through mail order catalogs Barber was one of the most successful residential architects of the late Victorian period in the United States 4 and his plans were used for houses in all 50 U S states and in nations as far away as Japan and the Philippines 4 Over four dozen Barber houses are individually listed on the National Register of Historic Places and several dozen more are listed as part of historic districts 5 George F Barberca 1910BornGeorge Franklin Barber 1854 07 31 July 31 1854 1 DeKalb Illinois USADiedFebruary 17 1915 1915 02 17 aged 60 1 Knoxville Tennessee USAResting placeGreenwood Cemetery Knoxville 1 OccupationArchitectSpouseLaura Cheney 2 ChildrenCharles George Jr Laura 2 Parent s Lyman and Cornelia Barber 3 Barber began designing houses in his native DeKalb Illinois in the late 1880s before permanently moving his base to Knoxville Tennessee in 1888 His first widely circulated catalog Cottage Souvenir No 2 contained designs and floor plans for 59 houses mostly in the Queen Anne style as well as Barber s architectural philosophy and tips for homebuilders Later catalogs contained more Colonial designs 4 By the time his catalog business ended in 1908 Barber had sold upwards of 20 000 plans 4 Barber was the father of Charles I Barber 1887 1962 who became a successful architect in his own right and designed several notable buildings in the Knoxville area during the first half of the 20th century 4 BarberMcMurry an architectural firm cofounded by Charles Barber in 1915 still operates in Knoxville 6 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life and career 1 2 Catalog business 1 3 Later career 2 Works 2 1 Barber houses today 3 Bibliography 3 1 Catalogs 3 2 Magazines 3 3 Other 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksBiography editEarly life and career edit nbsp The Charles E Bradt House one of Barber s first designsBarber was born in DeKalb Illinois in 1854 the son of Lyman and Cornelia Spring Barber 3 While still a young child he moved to Marmaton Kansas where he lived on the farm of his sister Olive and her husband William Barrett 4 By the 1870s he owned an adjacent farm where he raised plants which he advertised as ornamental nursery stock 4 During this period he learned architecture through mail order books namely George Palliser s American Cottage Homes and technical books published by A J Bicknell and Company 3 In 1884 Barber patented a nail holding attachment for hammers 4 By the mid 1880s Barber was back in DeKalb where he produced his first architectural designs working for his brother s construction firm Barber and Boardman Contractors and Builders 3 In 1887 or early 1888 Barber published The Cottage Souvenir crudely produced on punched card stock and tied together with a piece of yarn which contained 14 house plans a revised edition published shortly afterward contained 18 4 7 The earliest buildings constructed from Barber s designs include the Charles E Bradt House 1887 and the Congregational Church 1888 both in DeKalb 4 The Bradt house was featured in the March 1888 issue of Carpentry and Building 8 Catalog business edit nbsp The Charles and Anna Drain House Drain Castle built in Drain Oregon between 1893 and 1895 In late 1888 Barber relocated to Knoxville Tennessee in hopes that the city s mountainous climate would be better for his declining health 4 He briefly partnered with Minnesota born architect Martin Parmalee but the partnership proved unsatisfactory 4 In 1892 he established a firm with one of his clients J C White handling the firm s business aspects 4 Barber also became a partner in the Edgewood Land Improvement Company which was developing a suburb east of Knoxville known as Park City modern Parkridge 4 9 He designed over a dozen houses for this suburb including his own house which still stands at 1635 Washington Avenue and the W O Haworth and F E McArthur houses which still stand on Washington and Jefferson Avenues and appeared in some of Barber s catalogs 10 In 1890 Barber published The Cottage Souvenir No 2 which contained 59 house plans as well as plans for 2 barns a chapel a church 2 storefronts and several pavilions 4 This catalog and its subsequent revisions led to an explosion in orders for Barber s firm Barber houses built during this period include the Jeremiah Nunan House in Jacksonville Oregon 11 the Donnelly House in Mount Dora Florida 4 and the J Hawkins Hart House in Henderson Kentucky 12 all of which still stand and are listed on the National Register He also remained active on a local level in Knoxville with the Romanesque inspired Isaac Ziegler House on 4th Avenue 13 and a house built for his printer S B Newman which still stands in Old North Knoxville 10 nbsp William H Baker House The Gables in Winchester Virginia built in 1899Around 1895 Barber parted ways with White and formed a new firm with a new partner Thomas Kluttz 3 That year Barber began publishing a magazine American Homes which advertised the firm s latest house plans offered tips on landscaping and interior design and published a multi part history of architecture by Louisville architect Charles Hite Smith 4 In 1896 the growing firm moved into the Barber designed French and Roberts Building on Gay Street with the firm s 30 draftsmen and 20 secretaries occupying an entire floor 4 Later career edit In the late 1890s and early 1900s Barber designed several elaborate mansions for affluent businessmen including the home of Carroll Lathrop Post brother of C W Post in Battle Creek Michigan 4 the home of tobacco magnate R J Reynolds in Winston Salem North Carolina 3 the home of People s Bank president N E Graham in East Brady Pennsylvania 4 and one of his grandest designs the 40 000 Mount Athos for Barboursville Virginia tycoon Walter G Newman 14 In the early 1900s Barber began to phase out his mail order business and with the help of his brother Manly focused on Knoxville area building projects 3 He later worked with architects R F Graf and John Ryno 9 15 The publication of American Homes was moved to New York in 1902 though Barber remained a regular contributor for several years afterward 4 The catalog business was suspended in 1908 4 Barber died on February 17 1915 and is interred with his family in Knoxville s Greenwood Cemetery 1 Works editMain article List of George Franklin Barber works nbsp The Queen Anne style I W P Buchanan House in Lebanon TennesseeThe bulk of Barber s business followed the catalog architecture model popularized by earlier architects such as Palliser Palliser amp Company Barber s great innovation was his willingness to personalize his designs for individual clients at moderate cost 4 As he wrote in his Cottage Souvenir No 2 Write to us concerning any changes wanted in plans and keep writing till you get what you want Don t be afraid of writing too often We are not easily offended 4 Though his firms records no longer survive it is believed that he sold as many as 20 000 plans in his career 4 Since he frequently modified his designs to fit his clients needs and specifications his houses are sometimes difficult to attribute with any certainty 16 In discussing his architectural philosophy Barber argued that nature has faithfully and accurately adhered to the Divine law of harmony 17 and that no place should adhere more closely to the fundamental principles of nature than one s house 17 Barber considered proportion the most important element in architecture likening it to harmony in music without which all else is a failure 17 He described ornamentation as the next most important element as it gives proportion expression Lastly was harmony of form or the relationship of curved and straight lines to one another 17 nbsp The Robert Covington House in Hazlehurst Mississippi one of Barber s later designsBarber s early designs were modified versions of the Queen Anne style which Barber liked to enrich with the addition of Romanesque elements 4 Barber houses constructed in this period are characterized by features such imposing turrets projecting windows verandas flanked by circular pavilions and Syrian arches 4 In the latter half of the 1890s Barber began to offer more plans in the Colonial Revival style 4 These were often characterized by projecting porticos supported by large columns symmetrical facades and flat decks with balustrades Later Barber catalogs contained Bungalow and Craftsman styles though few of these were built 4 Some have suggested that Barber was the first to sell prefabricated houses in crates but there is no evidence that he was actually engaged in manufacturing 4 While he occasionally supplied builders with manufactured windows doors staircases and other components and millwork companies advertised in Barber s magazine it is unclear whether entire houses were sold as kits by anyone prior to 1900 4 Barber houses today edit nbsp The John Owings House in Laurens South CarolinaA revived interest in Barber s work began in the 1970s 4 and since then hundreds of houses built using his plans have been identified Over four dozen of these have been individually listed on the National Register of Historic Places for their architecture and several dozen more have been listed as contributing properties in historic districts 5 At least four Barber houses the Isaac Ziegler House the Jeremiah Nunan House the John Calvin Owings House Laurens South Carolina and Roselawn Natchitoches Louisiana have been documented by the Historic American Buildings Survey 11 13 18 19 Many extant Barber houses are still used as residences while others house museums bed and breakfasts and office space Barber houses have provided inspiration for Christmas cards wall hangings and at least one dollhouse model 4 While most of Barber s work was domestic several notable non domestic Barber designed buildings survive These include the Congregational Church now DeKalb Foursquare Church in DeKalb Illinois 4 the Raper Building in Lexington North Carolina 20 and Bartlett Hall at Maryville College 21 Bibliography editCatalogs edit Modern Artistic Cottages or The Cottage Souvenir Designed to Meet the Wants of Mechanics and Home Builders c 1887 1888 The Cottage Souvenir No 2 Containing 120 Original Designs in Cottage and Detail Architecture 1891 The Cottage Souvenir Revised and Enlarged Containing Over Two Hundred Original Designs and Plans of Artistic Dwellings 1892 Artistic Homes How to Plan and How to Built Them 1895 New Model Dwellings and How Best to Build Them Containing a Great Variety of Designs Plans and Interior Views of Modern Dwellings c 1896 Modern Dwellings and Their Proper Construction A Book of Practical Designs and Information for Those Who Wish to Build and Beautify Their Homes 1899 Art in Architecture With the Modern Architectural Designer for Those who Wish to Build or Beautify Their Homes c 1902 1903 American Homes A Book of Everything for Those who are Planning to Build or Beautify Their Homes 1907 Magazines edit American Homes A Journal Devoted to Planning Building and Beautifying the Home 1895 1902 published by Charles Hite Smith 1902 1904 Other edit Appreciation 1896 See also editBaumann family architects Eastlake movement Stick Eastlake Shingle Style architectureReferences edit a b c d George Franklin Barber at Findagrave com Retrieved 3 May 2011 a b East Tennessee Historical Society Lucile Deaderick ed Heart of the Valley A History of Knoxville Tennessee Knoxville Tenn East Tennessee Historical Society 1976 pp 491 492 a b c d e f g M Ruth Little 2009 Barber George F 1854 1915 North Carolina Architects and Builders A Biographical Dictionary Website maintained by North Carolina State University Libraries Accessed May 3 2011 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah Michael Tomlan Introduction to George F Barber s Victorian Cottage Architecture An American Catalog of Designs 1891 Dover Publications 2004 pp v xvi a b National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service March 13 2009 BarberMcMurry History Archived 2011 07 25 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 3 May 2011 Barber amp McMurry Architects Archived 2009 06 28 at the Wayback Machine Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture accessed July 18 2010 Carpentry and Building Vol 10 March 1888 p 50 Downloaded from Google Books 3 May 2011 a b Ann Bennett National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form for Park City Historic District 22 June 1990 a b Knox Heritage George Barber Homes Trolley Tour Booklet Archived 2011 07 26 at the Wayback Machine 2007 Retrieved 1 May 2011 a b Marion Ross and Christopher Owens Historic American Buildings Survey for Jeremiah Nunan House 1971 Retrieved 1 May 2011 Rachel Alexander National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form for J Hawkins Hart House Archived 2010 12 01 at the Wayback Machine 1 October 2010 Retrieved 1 May 2011 a b Joseph Herndon Historic American Buildings Survey for Isaac Ziegler House 1974 Retrieved 1 May 2011 Jeff O Dell John Salmon and Randolph Turner National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form for Madison Barbour Rural Historic District December 1989 Section 7 pp 33 34 Retrieved 3 May 2011 Ann Bennett National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form for Stratford 23 March 2009 Ann Bennett Historic and Architectural Resources in Knoxville and Knox County Tennessee May 1994 Sec 7 p 51 Retrieved 2 May 2011 a b c d George F Barber Victorian Cottage Architecture An American Catalog of Designs Dover Publications 2004 pp 3 7 Nancy Pittenger and Tracy Power Historic American Buildings Survey John Calvin Owings House 1988 Retrieved 1 May 2011 Cane River National Heritage Area Committee Historic American Buildings Survey Roselawn c 2004 Retrieved 1 May 2011 Uptown Lexington Inc Historic Uptown Lexington North Carolina A Heritage Tour Archived 2009 09 02 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2 May 2011 Tennessee Civil War National Heritage Area The National Heritage Area Program and Blount County Tennessee A Feasibility Study Archived 2013 09 30 at the Wayback Machine p 13 Retrieved 2 May 2011 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to George Franklin Barber The George F Barber Collection at the Calvin M McClung Historical Collection contains portraits old advertisements and digital copies of some of Barber s catalogs and magazines Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Franklin Barber amp oldid 1186085503, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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