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Stone, Carpenter & Willson

Stone, Carpenter & Willson was a Providence, Rhode Island based architectural firm in the late 19th and early 20th Centuries. It was named for the partners Alfred Stone (1834–1908),[1] Charles E. Carpenter (1845–1923).[2] and Edmund R. Willson (1856–1906).[3] The firm was one of the state's most prominent.

Stone, Carpenter & Willson, c.1895.

It was established about 1885 when Willson became a full partner in the Providence architectural firm of Stone & Carpenter.

Partner biographies Edit

Alfred Stone was born in East Machias, Maine, in 1834. He attended the Washington Academy in that town. His family later moved to Salem, Massachusetts. After graduating high school, he began his architectural training. He worked for Towle & Foster, Shepard S. Woodcock,[4] Washburn & Brown, and Arthur Gilman. In 1859 he began working for Providence architect Alpheus C. Morse. He studied there until the outbreak of the Civil War. He went to enlist, but a knee injury prevented him from doing so. He then worked for various business interests, also traveling in the British Isles. He opened an architural office in Providence in 1864. From 1866 to 1871 William H. Emmerton, another Salem man, was Stone's partner. Emmerton was killed in the Great Revere Train Wreck of 1871. He practiced alone until 1873, when Charles E. Carpenter became partner. This association remained unchanged for a decade, when Willson was added. Stone died December 4, 1908 in Peterborough, New Hampshire.[5]

 
C. E. Carpenter, 1897.

Charles Edmund Carpenter was born in Pawtucket, Rhode Island on May 1, 1845. He attended the public schools until the age of 17, when he enlisted in the Union Army. He was discharged three months later, and returned to school. He began to work under Providence civil engineer William S. Haines, learning the business. He became interested in architecture, deciding to study it instead. He entered the office of Alfred Stone in 1867, and was made a partner in 1873. He retired from the firm's affairs in 1908, after the death of Stone. He died in 1923.[6]

Carpenter joined the American Institute of Architects in 1875 as a fellow, and was a founding member of the Rhode Island chapter the same year.[7]

In 1894 he married Eudora C. Sheldon, sister of Walter G. Sheldon.[6]

Edmund Russell Willson was born on April 21, 1856,[8] in West Roxbury, Massachusetts, now part of Boston. He was the son of Edmund B. Willson, a pastor, and Martha Anne (Buttrick) Willson. In 1859 Willson removed his family to Salem, where he took charge of the North Church, now the First Church in Salem. Edmund R. Willson attended Salem High School, graduating at the young age of 15 in 1871. He then entered Harvard University. He was there four years, graduating in 1875. After his graduation, he found a position in the office of Peabody & Stearns, Boston's leading architects. He also took an additional 9-month course in architecture at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. After a year he left Peabody & Stearns and moved to Sturgis & Brigham. After a year and a half there he left Boston and relocated to New York City, where he worked under Charles Follen McKim in McKim, Mead & Bigelow. McKim, recognizing Willson's talent and potential, convinced him to study abroad. He departed in May 1879, with a friend, William E. Chamberlin. Not long after their arrival in Paris, Willson and Chamberlin both gained admission to the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts, and both entered the atelier of Joseph Auguste Émile Vaudremer.[9] He returned to the United States in December 1881. In early 1882 he secured a position in the Providence firm of Stone & Carpenter. He was soon given a position of high responsibility, taking the firm's designs in a new direction. Recognizing this, in 1883 Alfred Stone and Charles E. Carpenter decided to admit him as a junior partner. He was given a full partnership in about 1885, and the firm officially became Stone, Carpenter & Willson. He remained with them until his death. On December 14 of 1882 Willson married Anne Lemoine (Frost) Willson, whom he had known in Salem. He died September 9, 1906, in Petersham, Massachusetts.[10] In 1884 Willson joined the American Institute of Architects, and became a Fellow in 1889 when the AIA merged with the Western Association of Architects and all members became Fellows.[11]

In 1901, a fourth partner, Walter G. Sheldon, was added.[10] Sheldon had worked at the firm for at least a decade. Despite the new partner, Sheldon's was not added to the firm's name. After Willson's death, however, the firm was renamed Stone, Carpenter & Sheldon, which it retained until its end in the 1920s. Other, later, partners included Sheldon's son, Gilbert Sheldon, and William C. Mustard.

Architectural works Edit

In Providence Edit

 
Fleur-de-lys Studios (1885)
 
Union Trust Company Building
  • Conrad Building, 373 Westminster St., Providence, RI (1885)[12]
  • Fleur-de-lys Studios, 7 Thomas St., Providence, RI (1885)[12]
  • George M. Smith House, 165 Hope St., Providence, RI (1886)[12]
  • Granville Gardiner House, 323 Angell St., Providence, RI (1886)
  • Sawyer Building, Butler Hospital, 345 Blackstone Blvd., Providence, RI (1886)[13]
  • Zechariah Chaffee, Jr. House, 169 Hope St., Providence, RI (1886) - This house was moved from 129 Hope in 1977.
  • Stephen Waterman House, 70 Stimson Ave., Providence, RI (1887)[12]
  • William Wilkinson Building, 210 Westminster St., Providence, RI (1887)
  • Y.M.C.A., 519 Westminster St., Providence, RI (1887) - This building was demolished in 1913.
  • Enterprise Building, 7 Eddy St, Providence, RI (1888) - This building has been demolished.
  • Estelle R. Jackson House, 8 Young Orchard Ave., Providence, RI (1888) - This house was demolished in the 1970s.
  • Exchange Bank Building, 59 Westminster St., Providence, RI (1888)[12]
  • Israel B. Mason House, 571 Broad St., Providence, RI (1888)[12]
  • James Bartlett, Jr. House, 254 Knight St., Providence, RI (1888)
  • Wilbour Hall, Prospect and George Streets (1888)[14]
  • Jeffrey Davis House, 260 Elmwood Ave., Providence, RI (1888)[12]
  • John McManus House, 265 Bowen St., Providence, RI (1888)[15]
  • Lyman Klapp House, 217 Hope St., Providence, RI (1888)[12]
  • James A. Potter House, 359 Broad St., Providence, RI (1889)[12]
  • Josephine Rathbone House, 305 Hope St., Providence, RI (1889)
  • Joseph E. Fletcher House, 19 Stimson Ave., Providence, RI (1889)[12]
  • Lyman Hall, 83 Waterman St., Brown University, Providence, RI (1889)[12]
  • Waterman Building, 12 Olneyville Sq., Olneyville, Providence, RI (1890) - Top 2 floors removed after the damages of Hurricane Carol
  • Burrill Building, 291 Westminster St., Providence, RI (1891)[12]
  • Edmund T. Moulton House, 246 Hope St., Providence, RI (1891)[12]
  • Ladd Observatory, 210 Doyle Ave., Providence, RI (1891)[16]
  • South Main Street Fire Station, 303 S. Main St., Providence, RI (1891)
  • G. Richmond Parsons House, 276 George St., Providence, RI (1892)[12]
  • Industrial Trust Co. Building (First), 49 Westminster St., Providence, RI (1892) - This building was demolished c. 1970.
  • Main Building, Rhode Island School for the Deaf, 520 Hope St., Providence, RI (1892) - This has been demolished.
  • George H. Dart House, 16 Stimson Ave., Providence, RI (1893)[12]
  • Telephone Building, 112 Union St., Providence, RI (1893)[17]
  • Central Police Station, 157 Fountain St., Providence, RI (1894) - Has been demolished.
  • Frederick M. Sackett House, 177 George St., Providence, RI (1894)
  • Lauderdale & Francis Buildings, 136 & 146 Westminster St., Providence, RI (1894)[12]
  • Ida M. and William L. Slade house, 40 Irving Ave., Providence, RI (1896)
  • C. Morris Smith House, 112 Benevolent St., Providence, RI (1895) - This house was demolished in 1966.
  • Robert W. Taft House, 154 Hope St., Providence, RI (1895)[12]
  • Frank W. Matteson House, 38 Cushing St., Providence, RI (1896)
  • Providence Public Library, 150 Empire St., Providence, RI (1896) - Opened in 1900.[12]
  • Providence Union Station, 36 Exchange Ter., Providence, RI (1896)[12]
  • Remodeling, Providence Institution for Savings Building, 128 S. Main St., Providence, RI (1896)[12]
  • Carl Barus House, 30 Elmgrove Ave., Providence, RI (1897)
  • Charles H. Warren House, 168 Governor St., Providence, RI (1897)
  • John M. Rounds House, 72 Taber Ave., Providence, RI (1897)
  • Pembroke Hall, 172 Meeting St., Pembroke College, Providence, RI - Pembroke is now part of Brown University.[12]
  • George O. Sackett House, 37 Arlington Ave., Providence, RI (1899)[18]
  • Southwest Pavilion, Rhode Island Hospital, 593 Eddy St., Providence, RI (1899)
  • Addition, University Club, 219 Benefit St., Providence, RI (1900)[12]
  • Brunonia Hall, 175 Thayer St., Brown University, Providence, RI (1900) - This has been demolished.
  • James M. Anthony House, 15 Arch St., Providence, RI (1900)
  • Union Trust Co. Building, 62 Dorrance St., Providence, RI (1900)[12]
  • Remodeling for Marsden J. Perry, John Brown House, 52 Power St., Providence, RI (1901)[12]
  • Archie McMutry House, 41 Moore St., Providence, RI (1902)
  • Edward B. Aldrich House, 144 Meeting St., Providence, RI (1902)
  • John N. Mason Building, 169 Weybosset St., Providence, RI (1903) - The facade of this building was altered in 2002.
  • Pendleton House, RISD Museum of Art, 224 Benefit St., Providence, RI (1904)[12]
  • Administration Building, Swan Point Cemetery, 585 Blackstone Blvd., Providence, RI (1905)[12]
  • Gerald M. Richmond House, 166 Waterman St., Providence, RI (1905)
  • James P. Tierney House, 275 Olney St., Providence, RI (1905)[12]
  • Remodeling for Nelson W. Aldrich, Robert S. Burroughs House, 110 Benevolent St., Providence, RI (1905)[12]
  • Harold T. Merriman House, 158 Governor St., Providence, RI (1906)
  • Sayles Gymnasium, 95 Cushing St., Pembroke College, Providence, RI (1906)[12]

Elsewhere in Providence County Edit

  • Rhode Island State Almshouse, 1511 Pontiac Ave., Howard, Cranston, RI (1888)
  • Pacific National Bank Building, 255 Main St., Pawtucket, RI (1890) - The upper floors of this building were remodeled c.1937.[19]
  • Wheaton Building, 228 Main St., Pawtucket, RI (1892) - Now the Toole Building, it was remodeling in 1922.[19]
  • Bridge Mill Power Plant, 25 Roosevelt Ave., Pawtucket, RI (1893)
  • Pawtucket Boys Club, 53 East Ave., Pawtucket, RI (1902)[20]

In Bristol County Edit

  • Henry J. Steere House, 100 Nayatt Rd., Nayatt, Barrington, RI (1885) - Now demolished, modeled on Providence's Nightingale-Brown House.[21]
  • Barrington Town Hall, 283 County Rd., Barrington, RI (1887)[17]
  • Industrial Trust Co. Branch, 414 Main St., Warren, RI (1906)[17]

In Newport County Edit

  • The Mill (Adeline E. H. Slicer Cottage), 581 W. Main Rd., Little Compton, RI (1886)[17]
  • The Rock (Clarence T. Gardner Cottage), Round Pond Rd., Little Compton, RI (1886)[22]
  • Gatherem (Edwin W. Winter Cottage), 28 Grinnell Rd., Little Compton, RI (1905)[17]

In Washington County Edit

 
Lippitt Hall, University of Rhode Island (1897)

In Kent County Edit

In other states Edit

  • Petersham Memorial Library,[23] 23 Common St., Petersham, MA (1889)
  • Frank E. Richmond Cottage, Grindstone Neck, Winter Harbor, ME (1891)
  • Rhode Island State Building, World's Columbian Exhibition, Chicago, IL (1893) - Demolished after the fair.
  • Scoville Memorial Library, 38 Main St., Salisbury, CT (1894)
  • Nichewaug Inn, 25 Common St., Petersham, MA (1899)
  • "Short Acre", 16 North Main St., Petersham, MA (1899) - remodel of Arron Brooks Jr., house (circa 1829)
  • Whitney Memorial Library, 738 Main St., Bolton, MA (1903)
  • Petersham Center School, 31 Spring St., Petersham, MA (1905)
  • Strathglass Building, 25 Hartford St., Rumford, ME (1906)

Gallery Edit

Associated architects and draftsmen Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "American Architect's Biographies S". Society of Architectural Historians. Retrieved 2008-09-05.
  2. ^ "American Architect's Biographies C". Society of Architectural Historians. Retrieved 2008-09-05.
  3. ^ "American Architect's Biographies W". Society of Architectural Historians. Retrieved 2008-09-05.
  4. ^ Proceedings of the Rhode Island Historical Society, 1908-1909. Providence: Standard Printing Co., 1910.
  5. ^ "Alfred Stone, F. A. I. A." American Institute of Architects Quarterly Bulletin April 1908: 200.
  6. ^ a b History of the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, Biographical. New York: American Historical Society, 1920.
  7. ^ Charles E. Carpenter, AIA Historical Directory of American Architects.
  8. ^ Architects, American Institute of; Brown, Glenn (1906). Quarterly Bulletin Containing an Index of Literature from the Publications of Architectural Societies and Periodicals on Architecture and Allied Subjects.
  9. ^ Alice Thomine-Berrada, Emile Vaudremer, 1829-1914: la rigueur de l'architecture publique (Picard, 2004)
  10. ^ a b "Two Rhode Island Architects". American Architect and Building News 9 Feb. 1907: 67.
  11. ^ Edmund R. Willson, AIA Historical Directory of American Architects.
  12. ^ 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 Woodward, Wm. McKenzie. PPS/AIA Guide to Providence Architecture. 2003.
  13. ^ Butler Hospital - NRHP Nomination (1978)
  14. ^ "Facilities Management". Facilities Management. Brown University. Retrieved 7 April 2019. Built in 1888, Wilbour Hall was designed by Stone, Carpenter & Willson.
  15. ^ Architecture & Building (June 30, 1888)
  16. ^ "Sketch for the Ladd Observatory". The American Architect and Building News. Vol. XXIX, no. 760. Boston: Ticknor. July 19, 1890. Retrieved 12 December 2019.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g Buildings of Rhode Island (2005)
  18. ^ Wayland Historic District - NRHP Nomination
  19. ^ a b Illustrated History of Pawtucket, Central Falls & Vicinity (1897)
  20. ^ The Brickbuilder (March, 1903)
  21. ^ American Furniture in Pendleton House (1986)
  22. ^ American Architect & Building News (August 28, 1886)
  23. ^ http://www.petershamlibrary.net/ Ptersham Library website
  24. ^ "Walter F. Fontaine".

External links Edit

  • "Graphics Collections". RIHS. Rhode Island Historical Society. Retrieved 12 December 2019. (Includes architectural drawings by Stone, Carpenter & Willson)
  • "Stone Carpenter & Willson". Guide to Providence Architecture. Providence Preservation Society. Retrieved 12 December 2019.

stone, carpenter, willson, providence, rhode, island, based, architectural, firm, late, 19th, early, 20th, centuries, named, partners, alfred, stone, 1834, 1908, charles, carpenter, 1845, 1923, edmund, willson, 1856, 1906, firm, state, most, prominent, 1895, e. Stone Carpenter amp Willson was a Providence Rhode Island based architectural firm in the late 19th and early 20th Centuries It was named for the partners Alfred Stone 1834 1908 1 Charles E Carpenter 1845 1923 2 and Edmund R Willson 1856 1906 3 The firm was one of the state s most prominent Stone Carpenter amp Willson c 1895 It was established about 1885 when Willson became a full partner in the Providence architectural firm of Stone amp Carpenter Contents 1 Partner biographies 2 Architectural works 2 1 In Providence 2 2 Elsewhere in Providence County 2 3 In Bristol County 2 4 In Newport County 2 5 In Washington County 2 6 In Kent County 2 7 In other states 3 Gallery 4 Associated architects and draftsmen 5 References 6 External linksPartner biographies EditAlfred Stone was born in East Machias Maine in 1834 He attended the Washington Academy in that town His family later moved to Salem Massachusetts After graduating high school he began his architectural training He worked for Towle amp Foster Shepard S Woodcock 4 Washburn amp Brown and Arthur Gilman In 1859 he began working for Providence architect Alpheus C Morse He studied there until the outbreak of the Civil War He went to enlist but a knee injury prevented him from doing so He then worked for various business interests also traveling in the British Isles He opened an architural office in Providence in 1864 From 1866 to 1871 William H Emmerton another Salem man was Stone s partner Emmerton was killed in the Great Revere Train Wreck of 1871 He practiced alone until 1873 when Charles E Carpenter became partner This association remained unchanged for a decade when Willson was added Stone died December 4 1908 in Peterborough New Hampshire 5 C E Carpenter 1897 Charles Edmund Carpenter was born in Pawtucket Rhode Island on May 1 1845 He attended the public schools until the age of 17 when he enlisted in the Union Army He was discharged three months later and returned to school He began to work under Providence civil engineer William S Haines learning the business He became interested in architecture deciding to study it instead He entered the office of Alfred Stone in 1867 and was made a partner in 1873 He retired from the firm s affairs in 1908 after the death of Stone He died in 1923 6 Carpenter joined the American Institute of Architects in 1875 as a fellow and was a founding member of the Rhode Island chapter the same year 7 In 1894 he married Eudora C Sheldon sister of Walter G Sheldon 6 Edmund Russell Willson was born on April 21 1856 8 in West Roxbury Massachusetts now part of Boston He was the son of Edmund B Willson a pastor and Martha Anne Buttrick Willson In 1859 Willson removed his family to Salem where he took charge of the North Church now the First Church in Salem Edmund R Willson attended Salem High School graduating at the young age of 15 in 1871 He then entered Harvard University He was there four years graduating in 1875 After his graduation he found a position in the office of Peabody amp Stearns Boston s leading architects He also took an additional 9 month course in architecture at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology After a year he left Peabody amp Stearns and moved to Sturgis amp Brigham After a year and a half there he left Boston and relocated to New York City where he worked under Charles Follen McKim in McKim Mead amp Bigelow McKim recognizing Willson s talent and potential convinced him to study abroad He departed in May 1879 with a friend William E Chamberlin Not long after their arrival in Paris Willson and Chamberlin both gained admission to the Ecole nationale superieure des Beaux Arts and both entered the atelier of Joseph Auguste Emile Vaudremer 9 He returned to the United States in December 1881 In early 1882 he secured a position in the Providence firm of Stone amp Carpenter He was soon given a position of high responsibility taking the firm s designs in a new direction Recognizing this in 1883 Alfred Stone and Charles E Carpenter decided to admit him as a junior partner He was given a full partnership in about 1885 and the firm officially became Stone Carpenter amp Willson He remained with them until his death On December 14 of 1882 Willson married Anne Lemoine Frost Willson whom he had known in Salem He died September 9 1906 in Petersham Massachusetts 10 In 1884 Willson joined the American Institute of Architects and became a Fellow in 1889 when the AIA merged with the Western Association of Architects and all members became Fellows 11 In 1901 a fourth partner Walter G Sheldon was added 10 Sheldon had worked at the firm for at least a decade Despite the new partner Sheldon s was not added to the firm s name After Willson s death however the firm was renamed Stone Carpenter amp Sheldon which it retained until its end in the 1920s Other later partners included Sheldon s son Gilbert Sheldon and William C Mustard Architectural works EditIn Providence Edit Fleur de lys Studios 1885 Union Trust Company BuildingConrad Building 373 Westminster St Providence RI 1885 12 Fleur de lys Studios 7 Thomas St Providence RI 1885 12 George M Smith House 165 Hope St Providence RI 1886 12 Granville Gardiner House 323 Angell St Providence RI 1886 Sawyer Building Butler Hospital 345 Blackstone Blvd Providence RI 1886 13 Zechariah Chaffee Jr House 169 Hope St Providence RI 1886 This house was moved from 129 Hope in 1977 Stephen Waterman House 70 Stimson Ave Providence RI 1887 12 William Wilkinson Building 210 Westminster St Providence RI 1887 Y M C A 519 Westminster St Providence RI 1887 This building was demolished in 1913 Enterprise Building 7 Eddy St Providence RI 1888 This building has been demolished Estelle R Jackson House 8 Young Orchard Ave Providence RI 1888 This house was demolished in the 1970s Exchange Bank Building 59 Westminster St Providence RI 1888 12 Israel B Mason House 571 Broad St Providence RI 1888 12 James Bartlett Jr House 254 Knight St Providence RI 1888 Wilbour Hall Prospect and George Streets 1888 14 Jeffrey Davis House 260 Elmwood Ave Providence RI 1888 12 John McManus House 265 Bowen St Providence RI 1888 15 Lyman Klapp House 217 Hope St Providence RI 1888 12 James A Potter House 359 Broad St Providence RI 1889 12 Josephine Rathbone House 305 Hope St Providence RI 1889 Joseph E Fletcher House 19 Stimson Ave Providence RI 1889 12 Lyman Hall 83 Waterman St Brown University Providence RI 1889 12 Waterman Building 12 Olneyville Sq Olneyville Providence RI 1890 Top 2 floors removed after the damages of Hurricane Carol Burrill Building 291 Westminster St Providence RI 1891 12 Edmund T Moulton House 246 Hope St Providence RI 1891 12 Ladd Observatory 210 Doyle Ave Providence RI 1891 16 South Main Street Fire Station 303 S Main St Providence RI 1891 G Richmond Parsons House 276 George St Providence RI 1892 12 Industrial Trust Co Building First 49 Westminster St Providence RI 1892 This building was demolished c 1970 Main Building Rhode Island School for the Deaf 520 Hope St Providence RI 1892 This has been demolished George H Dart House 16 Stimson Ave Providence RI 1893 12 Telephone Building 112 Union St Providence RI 1893 17 Central Police Station 157 Fountain St Providence RI 1894 Has been demolished Frederick M Sackett House 177 George St Providence RI 1894 Lauderdale amp Francis Buildings 136 amp 146 Westminster St Providence RI 1894 12 Ida M and William L Slade house 40 Irving Ave Providence RI 1896 C Morris Smith House 112 Benevolent St Providence RI 1895 This house was demolished in 1966 Robert W Taft House 154 Hope St Providence RI 1895 12 Frank W Matteson House 38 Cushing St Providence RI 1896 Providence Public Library 150 Empire St Providence RI 1896 Opened in 1900 12 Providence Union Station 36 Exchange Ter Providence RI 1896 12 Remodeling Providence Institution for Savings Building 128 S Main St Providence RI 1896 12 Carl Barus House 30 Elmgrove Ave Providence RI 1897 Charles H Warren House 168 Governor St Providence RI 1897 John M Rounds House 72 Taber Ave Providence RI 1897 Pembroke Hall 172 Meeting St Pembroke College Providence RI Pembroke is now part of Brown University 12 George O Sackett House 37 Arlington Ave Providence RI 1899 18 Southwest Pavilion Rhode Island Hospital 593 Eddy St Providence RI 1899 Addition University Club 219 Benefit St Providence RI 1900 12 Brunonia Hall 175 Thayer St Brown University Providence RI 1900 This has been demolished James M Anthony House 15 Arch St Providence RI 1900 Union Trust Co Building 62 Dorrance St Providence RI 1900 12 Remodeling for Marsden J Perry John Brown House 52 Power St Providence RI 1901 12 Archie McMutry House 41 Moore St Providence RI 1902 Edward B Aldrich House 144 Meeting St Providence RI 1902 John N Mason Building 169 Weybosset St Providence RI 1903 The facade of this building was altered in 2002 Pendleton House RISD Museum of Art 224 Benefit St Providence RI 1904 12 Administration Building Swan Point Cemetery 585 Blackstone Blvd Providence RI 1905 12 Gerald M Richmond House 166 Waterman St Providence RI 1905 James P Tierney House 275 Olney St Providence RI 1905 12 Remodeling for Nelson W Aldrich Robert S Burroughs House 110 Benevolent St Providence RI 1905 12 Harold T Merriman House 158 Governor St Providence RI 1906 Sayles Gymnasium 95 Cushing St Pembroke College Providence RI 1906 12 Elsewhere in Providence County Edit Rhode Island State Almshouse 1511 Pontiac Ave Howard Cranston RI 1888 Pacific National Bank Building 255 Main St Pawtucket RI 1890 The upper floors of this building were remodeled c 1937 19 Wheaton Building 228 Main St Pawtucket RI 1892 Now the Toole Building it was remodeling in 1922 19 Bridge Mill Power Plant 25 Roosevelt Ave Pawtucket RI 1893 Pawtucket Boys Club 53 East Ave Pawtucket RI 1902 20 In Bristol County Edit Henry J Steere House 100 Nayatt Rd Nayatt Barrington RI 1885 Now demolished modeled on Providence s Nightingale Brown House 21 Barrington Town Hall 283 County Rd Barrington RI 1887 17 Industrial Trust Co Branch 414 Main St Warren RI 1906 17 In Newport County Edit The Mill Adeline E H Slicer Cottage 581 W Main Rd Little Compton RI 1886 17 The Rock Clarence T Gardner Cottage Round Pond Rd Little Compton RI 1886 22 Gatherem Edwin W Winter Cottage 28 Grinnell Rd Little Compton RI 1905 17 In Washington County Edit Lippitt Hall University of Rhode Island 1897 Davis Hall 10 Lippitt Rd University of Rhode Island Kingston South Kingstown RI 1895 17 Lippitt Hall 5 Lippitt Rd University of Rhode Island Kingston South Kingstown RI 1897 17 In Kent County Edit Outbuildings Indian Oaks Nelson W Aldrich estate 836 Warwick Neck Ave Warwick RI 1899 et al In other states Edit Petersham Memorial Library 23 23 Common St Petersham MA 1889 Frank E Richmond Cottage Grindstone Neck Winter Harbor ME 1891 Rhode Island State Building World s Columbian Exhibition Chicago IL 1893 Demolished after the fair Scoville Memorial Library 38 Main St Salisbury CT 1894 Nichewaug Inn 25 Common St Petersham MA 1899 Short Acre 16 North Main St Petersham MA 1899 remodel of Arron Brooks Jr house circa 1829 Whitney Memorial Library 738 Main St Bolton MA 1903 Petersham Center School 31 Spring St Petersham MA 1905 Strathglass Building 25 Hartford St Rumford ME 1906 Gallery Edit Israel B Mason House Providence 1888 Lyman Hall Brown University 1889 Telephone Building Providence 1893 Old Stone Bank Providence 1896 Providence Public Library Providence 1896 Pembroke Hall Pembroke College 1897 Union Station Providence 1896 Sayles Gymnasium now Smith Buonanno Hall Pembroke College 1907Associated architects and draftsmen EditWalter F Fontaine 24 George F Hall Norman M Isham Frank W MartinReferences Edit American Architect s Biographies S Society of Architectural Historians Retrieved 2008 09 05 American Architect s Biographies C Society of Architectural Historians Retrieved 2008 09 05 American Architect s Biographies W Society of Architectural Historians Retrieved 2008 09 05 Proceedings of the Rhode Island Historical Society 1908 1909 Providence Standard Printing Co 1910 Alfred Stone F A I A American Institute of Architects Quarterly Bulletin April 1908 200 a b History of the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations Biographical New York American Historical Society 1920 Charles E Carpenter AIA Historical Directory of American Architects Architects American Institute of Brown Glenn 1906 Quarterly Bulletin Containing an Index of Literature from the Publications of Architectural Societies and Periodicals on Architecture and Allied Subjects Alice Thomine Berrada Emile Vaudremer 1829 1914 la rigueur de l architecture publique Picard 2004 a b Two Rhode Island Architects American Architect and Building News 9 Feb 1907 67 Edmund R Willson AIA Historical Directory of American Architects 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 Woodward Wm McKenzie PPS AIA Guide to Providence Architecture 2003 Butler Hospital NRHP Nomination 1978 Facilities Management Facilities Management Brown University Retrieved 7 April 2019 Built in 1888 Wilbour Hall was designed by Stone Carpenter amp Willson Architecture amp Building June 30 1888 Sketch for the Ladd Observatory The American Architect and Building News Vol XXIX no 760 Boston Ticknor July 19 1890 Retrieved 12 December 2019 a b c d e f g Buildings of Rhode Island 2005 Wayland Historic District NRHP Nomination a b Illustrated History of Pawtucket Central Falls amp Vicinity 1897 The Brickbuilder March 1903 American Furniture in Pendleton House 1986 American Architect amp Building News August 28 1886 http www petershamlibrary net Ptersham Library website Walter F Fontaine External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Stone Carpenter amp Willson Graphics Collections RIHS Rhode Island Historical Society Retrieved 12 December 2019 Includes architectural drawings by Stone Carpenter amp Willson Stone Carpenter amp Willson Guide to Providence Architecture Providence Preservation Society Retrieved 12 December 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stone Carpenter 26 Willson amp oldid 1090116039, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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