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Rudolph A. Herold

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40:"After his return, Herold moved to Sacramento in 1901 and he soon gained a reputation for his work on public buildings. Herold was a master of many styles of architecture, but was particularly adept with the use of terra cotta ornamentation. Over the years, Herold produced many memorable public and private structures, such as: Sacramento City Hall, Sacramento County Court House, Sacramento County Jail, Sacramento County Hospital, Tehama County Jail, Capital National Bank, Masonic Temple, Forum Building, Gormley Building, Del Paso Country Club, Mercy Hospital, Weimar Sanitarium in Colfax, Providence Hospital and Nurses Home in Oakland, and the Majestic Theater in Sacramento. Herold also designed many educational institutions, such as: Lincoln School, Marshall School, St. Francis School and Priory, Holy Rosary Academy in Woodland, Auburn High School, and Sutler Jr. High. Residences for prominent Sacramento families included Didion, McClatchy. Diepenbrock, Margen, Keyes, and Senator Bills. In addition, he designed two homes, in his home town of Lincoln, for the Jansen family. For his era, Rudolph Herold was recognized as one of the leading architects in Sacramento ." 34:"The architect for the building, Rudolph Herold, was a prominent Sacramento region designer who completed an impressive number of works in Northern California prior to his death at age 56. Herold was responsible for the design of the Sacramento City Hall, Forum Building and Capitol National Bank Building, as well as a number of other prominent local landmarks. Herold's years of architectural study in Europe, particularly Vienna, during the early part of the 20th century, appear to be responsible for his bold combinations of past and very new motifs into architectural interpretations uniquely his own " 37:"The building's architect, Rudolph Herold, was born in San Francisco in 1870. At the age of 18, he took a job with McDougall & Sons, a building firm that evolved into an architectural firm. After several years with McDougall, Herold set out on his own as an independent architect and taught architecture at the Lincoln Evening School. Soon after, Herold went to Europe for a three year stay to study architecture ." 43:"Its designer, Rudolph Herold, was an innovative master architect who skillfully commanded and combined a range of stylistic vocabulary and design philosophies to create his own unique and highly aesthetic architectural statement." 46:"Architect & Engineer: Vol. 4, No. 3, pp. 60, 79, 88; Vol. 38, No. 2, p.85; Vol. 44, No. 2, pp 54-61; Vol. 45, No. 1, p. 49; Vol. 61, No. 1, p. 65; Vol. 61, No. 3, pp. 46, 48-65; Vol. 85, No. 2, p. 85." 223: 61: 173: 160: 23: 147: 143: 218: 213: 127:..died in San Francisco on April 14, 1926", "...born in San Francisco on December 25, 1870. 55: 8: 78:
After Rudolph's death his brother continued the firm, renamed P. J. Herold and Company.
188: 120: 65: 195:...so P.J. Herold returned to Scaramento, taking over his late brother's firm. 95: 207: 190:
Rudolph Adam Herold: The Public Career of a Northern California Architect
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Sacramento County Courthouse (built in 1913, demolished in 1965)
144:"National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination" 96:"Pacific Coast Architecture Database - Rudolph Adam Herold" 141: 186: 68:, listed on the National Register of Historic Places 205: 22:(1870-April 24, 1926) was an architect based in 193:. University of California, Davis. p. 22. 142:Paula Boghosian; Don Cox (October 13, 2000). 180: 166: 137: 135: 71:Mater Misericordiac Hospital, Sacramento 206: 174:"Image / Sacramento County Courthouse" 132: 122:Arts & Architecture, Volumes 29-30 88: 13: 14: 235: 161:22 photos, historic and from 2000 187:Julia Irene Armstrong (1984). 113: 1: 81: 7: 10: 240: 224:Architects from California 62:Sacramento Masonic Temple 29: 100:pcad.lib.washington.edu 24:Sacramento, California 148:National Park Service 125:. 1926. p. 103. 56:Sacramento City Hall 16:American architect 20:Rudolph A. Herold 231: 198: 197: 184: 178: 177: 170: 164: 158: 156: 154: 139: 130: 129: 117: 111: 110: 108: 106: 92: 239: 238: 234: 233: 232: 230: 229: 228: 204: 203: 202: 201: 185: 181: 172: 171: 167: 152: 150: 140: 133: 119: 118: 114: 104: 102: 94: 93: 89: 84: 51:Works include: 32: 17: 12: 11: 5: 237: 227: 226: 221: 216: 200: 199: 179: 165: 131: 112: 86: 85: 83: 80: 76: 75: 72: 69: 66:Sacramento, CA 64:, 1131 J St., 59: 31: 28: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 236: 225: 222: 220: 217: 215: 212: 211: 209: 196: 192: 191: 183: 175: 169: 162: 149: 145: 138: 136: 128: 124: 123: 116: 101: 97: 91: 87: 79: 73: 70: 67: 63: 60: 58:(before 1908) 57: 54: 53: 52: 49: 47: 44: 41: 38: 35: 27: 25: 21: 194: 189: 182: 168: 151:. Retrieved 126: 121: 115: 103:. Retrieved 99: 90: 77: 50: 48: 45: 42: 39: 36: 33: 19: 18: 219:1926 deaths 214:1870 births 153:October 31, 208:Categories 105:31 October 82:References 30:Career 159:With 155:2018 107:2018 210:: 146:. 134:^ 98:. 26:. 176:. 163:. 157:. 109:.

Index

Sacramento, California
Sacramento City Hall
Sacramento Masonic Temple
Sacramento, CA
"Pacific Coast Architecture Database - Rudolph Adam Herold"
Arts & Architecture, Volumes 29-30


"National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination"
National Park Service
22 photos, historic and from 2000
"Image / Sacramento County Courthouse"
Rudolph Adam Herold: The Public Career of a Northern California Architect
Categories
1870 births
1926 deaths
Architects from California

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