754:. In 1835 Stone and Nathan Whiting purchased a parcel of land âformerly owned by the Milford Marble Companyâ. In 1836 they sold a 2/3rds ownership of that land along with additional Milford property that contained the Marble Manufactory buildings to Theodore Shelton of New York City for the price of $ 10,000. By 1838 Milford Marble Company re-opened for business, but the difficulty that the mining process presented forced it to close again within a few years. Even so, enough of the prized Milford verde-antique marble was acquired to supply the mineral for decorative use throughout the country, including in the U.S. Capitol Building, the White House and the Smithsonian Institution. Whether Stone continued to maintain a 1/3 ownership of the land and mineral rights is not, at this point, documented, but in 1870 the Connecticut Legislature approved a resolution for incorporation of the Verd-Antique Marble Company with Stone, Isaac Thompson, Seymour Bradley, and W.W. Stone (Sidney Stone's only surviving son) as corporators. In 1877 Stone received an award for the marble and âits adaptation to interior decorationâ from the U.S. Centennial Commission at the International Exhibition in Philadelphia.
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probability that Stone was working elsewhere would also account for the diminishing number of his designs that appeared in New Haven during the 1860s and 1870s. Among Stone's few extant drawings is one that is labeled, "Transverse section, Kansas Church 48-610". It is known that the current St. Paul and St. James Church (originally St. Paul's Chapel, for which Stone served as contractor in 1829) sponsored early
Episcopal missionary work in Kansas, prompting the hypothesis that Stone's design may have been elicited through this connection. Additionally, notes collected by W.G. Snow from interviews with architects Henry L. Gay of Chicago and L.W. Robinson of New Haven in 1937 include the
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309:'s sensibilities on the design as justification for the attribution, it is unlikely that Stone would have assumed the responsibilities of architect for such an ambitious project this early in his career, particularly given the fact that it was not until two years laterâin 1832âthat he attended NYU to, in his own words, "prepare himself" for such duties. It was also not until 1832 that advertisements first began to appear in the local newspapers offering Stone's services as an architect which superseded his earlier (1829 and 1830) listings as joiner/builder. His earliest authenticated church designs include
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807:âcame together under the professional aegis" of Stone. Stone, Platt and Benne were cited together by the Washington National Monument Society for plans they submitted to the 1836 monument design competition. Chicago and California architect, Henry Lord Gay (1844-1921) was said to have worked in Stone's office "since grammar school" before moving on to practice in Chicago. In recent years, curiosity has been raised about Stone's relationship to his contemporary, Henry Austin, but little documentation has thus far been discovered that lends itself to such an inquiry.
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217:, says, âAfter working ten years or so as a master-builder and contractor, Stone determined to devote himself exclusively to the business of an architect, preparing and drawing specifications and superintending work in behalf of the owner. To better qualify himself for this work he took a short course of study at the New York University.â This assertion is borne out by early records from New York University which include Stone among the institution's first enrolled students in 1832. In that same year, the renowned civil engineer,
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301:, Stone was the designer of "more than one hundred churches in various parts of the country...churches in almost every State in the Unionâ. One of Stone's first (1829) attributed works was as contractor and master builder for New Haven's St. Paul's Chapel a 2-towered Gothic structure built of East Haven sandstone which was reportedly designed by Sherman Croswell, son of the long-time rector of New Haven's Trinity Church, Rev. Dr.
31:
237:, Stone, who headed the booklet's publication committee in 1876, was, at that time, "one of our most prominent and wealthy men, his property being largely in real estate in this city and Meriden. Much of his time is spent in the care and management of his property. " Luckes went on to describe Stone as, "Still young looking and active, and as erect as when he carried a sword in front of the Grays many years ago."
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National
Republican Convention in 1832, served as delegate from the 4th State Senatorial District in 1834, and as town councilman from 1834 to 1838. In 1843 he was named a member of the Presidential Committee of the General Hospital Society of Connecticut, and, in 1845, he was appointed a Justice of the Peace in New Haven.
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at Yale
University in 2000, and his front elevation of the Roger Sherman Baldwin House, New Haven is in the collection of the Carnegie Art Museum in Pittsburg, after his death, according to Seymour, "An immense pile of his drawings was sold for old paper" and "his working library was sold as being of
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In 1836 he advertised a house for sale on Union Street and a farm âcontaining 90 acresâ. In the same year he purchased 50 acres in Fair Haven for $ 1,322.64. (The supposition can be made that this property would have been owned in partnership with another buyer or the original seller since the amount
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His civic engagement continued through the 1870s. He was a delegate to the State
Republican Convention in 1859. At the outbreak of the Civil War he was offered a regimental command butâat 57âturned it down because of his age. He was the first major of the 'Veteran Grays' which was formed from the New
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Stone's reputation became such that by the 1830s Yale
College which at the time had not yet established its School of Architecture, referred students interested in that profession to him for tutelage. According to his granddaughter, Margaret M. Lothrop, he "was well known, partly because he designed
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through the loss of his first wife in 1841. Between 1841 and 1854 Milford land records show that Stone purchased 15 separate land parcels in that town while in New Haven his purchases begin again in 1842. In
December 1843 he purchased property from Horace Thompson at the corner of New Haven's Olive
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by the New Haven Common
Council and, along with Henry Austin, to the New Haven Mayor's Harbor Committee. In 1870 the CT House of Representatives requested that Stone and Austin prepare a cost estimate for a proposed extension of the Insane Hospital and State Prison. In 1880 Stone, at the age of 77,
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children's series, although her fame did not come until after her father's death. In her later years she confided that when she first learned she was to become a published author she decided to use a pen name in deference to her father who she said âlooked with disfavor on young women who wrote for
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As early as the 1830s Stone began acquiring parcels of undeveloped land in the New Haven area. His âfortunateâ purchase of pastureland in the New
Township area just north of Wooster Square led to the opening of Lyon Street. There he built several houses and developed the Stoneville neighborhood. In
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The drive and ambition that brought Stone to New Haven and motivated him to work his way up from journeyman to architect seems to have also fueled his business acumen. W.G. Snow, in his research notes, points to the fact that as a young man in 1826 Stone participated in a shooting competition in an
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which featured an
Italianate tower rising from the center of the structure were executed at a site on Whalley Avenue. Within the building Stone employed a new ventilation system that operated by "admitting pure air through an external wall". On December 18, 1860, Stone was issued US Patent 30938 A
462:
Although only a few of the far-flung churches alluded to by Lucke are currently known, credence is lent to the possibility that more of Stone's work exists outside of
Connecticut by the fact that the family was said to have traveled widely throughout the country during Harriet M. Stone's youth. The
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In addition, Stone was hired to remodel the interior of the United Congregational Church (North Church) on the New Haven Green in 1849. This was the church which Stone and his family regularly attended and where he served as deacon. It was originally designed by Ebenezer Johnson and built by David
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was hired by the fledgling university as Professor of Natural Philosophy and Civil Engineering (a title which was eventually changed to Professor of Civil Engineering and Architecture). Since, at the time, the school had no other faculty teaching architecture or related subjects, the conclusion can
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Sidney Mason Stone married Abigail Treat, daughter of Stephen Atwater Treat and Cornelia H. Bull of Milford, CT on April 20, 1830, in New Haven. She bore five children âMary L. (born 1832), William W. (born 1833), Harriet T. (born 1836 who died as an infant), Sidney M., Jr. (born 1838) who drowned
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on Whitney Avenue in New Haven with no architect listed. According to specification documents handwritten by Stone now archived at the New Haven Colony Historical Society Library, Leonard Pardee was contracted as the builder while Stone acted as North's 'agent'. Until its 1909 renovation, the home
212:
Like many architects and builders of the time, scant information is available regarding Stone's professional education. His obituary, says that he moved to New Haven at the age of 19 to âlearn the joinersâ tradeâ. Elizabeth Mills Brown elaborates, "He began as an itinerant carpenter and worked his
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published in 1981: âTwo of the other most active and prominent real estate speculators in the upper State Street area between 1850 and 1870 were William Atwater and Sidney Mason StoneâŚ. Land records indicate that Stone purchased most of the land on the eastern side of the street north of Humphrey
511:(which would become The Guilford Institute) to be built of a 'fine gray stone...resembling Quincy granite' that was quarried from a ledge within fifty feet of the building's site. The school building later housed the Shoreline Times offices and was recently converted to luxury condominiums called
178:, Governor of the Connecticut Colony between 1683 and 1698, as well as to the Mayflower Pilgrims. Sidney Mason Stone had one brother, Benjamin Woodruff Stone (1808-1891). Mary and Samuel Stone were divorced in 1816. Sidney and Benjamin were baptized in the Orange Congregational Church (built by
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who would gain prominence as an architect in the Midwest; Waterbury, CT architect Robert Wakeman Hill (1828-1909) who served as Connecticut State Architect under four governors and Samuel Atwater Treat, a New Haven native who went on to later prominence as an architect in the Chicago area. The
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no particular value" while a number of rare volumesâsome possibly purchased at the 1844 sale of Ithiel Town's libraryâremained in the family. At least 3 items from this collection were eventually purchased by philanthropist Paul Mellon and donated to New York's Pierpont Morgan Library in 1979.
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Throughout his life Stone participated in many civic activities and organizations. In 1830 he was chosen Captain of the New Haven Grays, a defense force for New Haven formed from the New Haven Militia in 1816, of which he had been a member since 1822. He was elected delegate to the Young Men's
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Haven Grays in 1861 and served in that position for three years. In 1863 he participated with the New Haven Grays at the inauguration of Connecticut Governor William Buckingham. In that same year he was appointed to the Committee of Arrangements for the funeral of Rear Admiral
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In addition to his direct influence on future generations of architects, Stone's presence in the life of his daughter Harriett is likely to have been a contributing factor to her interest in historical preservation during her adult life. Harriett and her husband,
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at 45 Elm Street. The same year he designed a home for his own family at the corner of Olive and Lyon Streets, in the area of New Haven that became known as Stoneville. The Stone family resided there until 1855 when he moved his family to a home on Elm Street.
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cited Stone's five story Townsend Block Building at the corner of Chapel and College Streets and the store of E. Marble (in which Stone soon located his own offices) as the finest of the new buildings, saying Stone "stands high as an architect and builder."
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in the 1840s and/or early 1850s. StoneâŚapparently began to build a few houses in this area on the speculative basis during the 1860s; however, the bulk of his holdings would not be developed until the last quarter of the 19th century.â
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On September 14, 1843, Stone married Harriet Mulford daughter of Hervey Mulford and Nancy Bradley of New Haven They had two daughters, Harriet M. (born 1844) and Julia M. (born 1853). Harriet grew up to be the bestselling author of the
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Third Census of the United States, 1810. (NARA microfilm publication M252, 71 rolls). Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. Census Place: Milford, New Haven, Connecticut; Roll 2; Page:498; Image:
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for this system which he described as useful for "a building or a vessel". In the same year his invention was also granted a patent in Great Britain. The patent has been referenced in later U.S. applications as recently as 1999.
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is 2/3rds of $ 2,000.) In 1839 Stone's advertisements began to list commercial rentals, in both New Haven and Milford, including in the Phoenix Block at 812 Chapel Street where he had, by that time, established his own office.
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New Haven : A book recording the varied activities of the author in his efforts over many years to promote the welfare of the city of his adoption since 1883, together with some researches into its storied past and many
1027:
New Haven: A book recording the varied activities of the author in his efforts over many years to promote the welfare of the city of his adoption since 1883, together with some researches into its storied past and many
338:
which was set on cut brownstone foundations, constructed of wood in the Greek Revival style with a portico of six Ionic columns. The finished building included frescos by New York City artists Molini and Allegri.
370:. Although a new site for the Hartford church was eventually secured on Albany Avenue, the building that was erected there in 1913 retained the steeple, portico and doors from Stone's original edifice. His
186:) on 5 February 1821. Benjamin eventually became a merchant tailor and, for several decades, operated a shop in New Haven, Connecticut. Mary Stone married William Woodruff, in 1829. She died in 1854.
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Rural Church and Cottage Architecture: comprising a series of designs for churches, parsonages, and cottages exemplified in plans, elevations, sections, and details, with practical descriptions
1582:
History and Antiquities of New Haven, Conn. From its Earliest Settlement to the Present Time: With Biographical Sketches and Statistical Information of the Public Institutions, &c., &c
1339:
Traverse Region Historical and Descriptive with Illustrations of Scenery and Portraits and Biographical Sketches of some of its Prominent Men and Pioneers, Chicago H. R. Page and Co. 1884.
564:. He also produced plans for the New Haven City Hall which were seriously considered although it was Henry Austin who ultimately designed the building that was erected in 1860-62.
2208:
672:. Later renamed Horchow Hall, the Perit House is currently owned by Yale University. It is designated as a lecture hall and offices for the Greenberg Fellows Program and the
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as âfaced with Portland stone, with iron doors, designed to be both burglar proof and fire proofâ. W.G. Snow, in his unpublished notes, credits Stone with the design for the
2253:
Szczesny-Adams, Chris, "Edward Townsend Mix: Books and the Professional Architect in Nineteenth Century Milwaukee, in Hafertepe, Kenneth and O'Gorman, James F., Editors,
432:, Brown remarks on St. Michael's, âThe building has burned twice, the steeple blown down once...Only the side walls and tall arched windows preserve the memory of 1855.â
475:
In 1833 Stone was listed as builder of Ithiel Town's 13-bed Connecticut General Hospital in New Haven. A June 1845 article on improvements in New Haven published in the
979:
Census of the United States: 1870; Census Place: New Haven Ward 6, New Haven, Connecticut; Roll: M593_110; Page: 575A; Image: 511; Family History Library Film: 545609.
1041:
New York University; its history influence, equipment and characteristics, with biographical sketches and portraits of founders, benefactors officers and alumni
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offering a house for sale on Broadway in New Haven. The following year records show that he purchased property on George Street from J. Eli Mix for $ 6,000.
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1780:
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in Warwickshire, England. The National Register of Historic Places Nomination form for the Hillhouse Avenue Historic District names Stone as builder of the
831:âuntil her death in 1924 at which time the cause was taken up by her daughter, Margaret, who succeeded in securing National Landmark status for the home.
827:, in 1883 (the year after Stone's death). Harriett devoted much of her time to its restoration and preservationâalong with that of its neighbor, Alcott's
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1379:
1427:
560:(later used as a dining hall for up to 450 students and, after 1902, as the Herrick Psychological Hall until it was demolished in 1917) and the first
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as College Street Hall until it was privately purchased in 1895 to become the ill-fated Rialto Theatre which was destroyed in a tragic fire in 1921.
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1294:
Shumwhttp://www.salon.com/2014/05/30/tori_amos_i_donât_know_what_youâre_taking_but_please_can_i_have_some_too/ay, Floyd and Hegel, Richard (Eds.)
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378:, when the steeple collapsed onto the roof, blowing out the walls. The church was rebuilt in 1939 to the original design by Worcester architect
1403:
Wilson, James Grant; Fiske, John, eds. (1900). "Lothrop, Harriett Mulford". Appletons' CyclopĂŚdia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton
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of February 24, 1849, commented, "The church reflects great credit upon the architect and builder," while Charles Albert Wright, in his book
305:. Although Stone's name has been given as "probable architect" of the Center Congregational Church in Meriden (1830) citing the influence of
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958:. Index. FamilySearch, Salt Lake City, Utah, 2009, 2010. (Index entries derived from digital copies of original and compiled records.)
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many churches and institutional buildings, and partly because he had collected around him a group of brilliant and devoted students."
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244:. After his death many of his numerous real estate holdings were sold to pay off claims against his estate amounting to $ 77,843.
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area of Fair Haven known as Barnesville. Fifty years later, in 1876, he owned the Barnesville Hotel and its contiguous property.
154:, to Samuel Stone and Mary (Polly) Woodruff, proprietors of the Woodruff Tavern, a popular stopping point for travelers on the
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short-lived architectural firm formed by Landra Beach Platt & Francis Benne that is currently credited with designing the
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673:
1016:
Brown, Elizabeth Mills, New Haven: A Guide to Architecture and Urban Design, Yale University Press: New Haven, 1976, p. 6
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1850 United States Federal Census Census Place: New Haven, New Haven, Connecticut; Roll: M432_47; Page: 296B; Image: 391
439:, âa brownstone fabricated in a pseudo Norman style" which was "remodeled in 1890...for use as a Public Library;â the
104:
architect and builder known for designs of churches, institutional buildings and residences. His creations incorporated
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at 119 Greene Street were lauded at the time as âadmirable and worthy of observation by persons intending to build".
347:
wrote, "The Church is regarded by many as one of the best examples of colonial architecture in New England." Stone's
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Before 1840 Stone had designed residences for a number of New Haven's most prominent citizens. Among them were the
2278:
http://www.sah.org/docs/misc-resources/brief-biographies-of-american-architects-who-died-between-1897-and-1947.pdf
515:âł The renovated property has retained much of Stone's original styling including the signature Italianate cupola.
428:(now the Church of St. Michael) the original design for which featured a Corinthian portico and tall steeple. In
158:. The Stone and Woodruff family lineages trace back to numerous Connecticut patriots and clergymen including Rev.
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by Richard Upjohn, et al., published by Northwestern Publishing House, Chicago, IL (n.d.) and most recently in
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1805:
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766:(1853) issued by the Congregational Churches of the United States General Convention held in Albany in 1852,
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and Lyon Streets where he built the home in which his own growing family would live between 1849 and 1854.
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Hoadley in 1814 Stone's modifications included the construction of the apse in which the pulpit stands.
125:
375:
105:
2164:
http://www.cityofnewhaven.com/CityPlan/pdfs/HistoricInventory/NH%20HRI%203%20State%20Street%20Area.pdf
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continued to serve on the Board of Trustees and the Finance Committee of the New Haven Orphan Asylum.
491:
gate had been recently installed at New Haven's Grove Street Cemetery. Stone's four-story design for
179:
714:
1834, only two years after he had begun to advertise his architectural services, he placed an ad in
891:
Divorce records for New Haven County, 1816, archived at the Connecticut State Library, Hartford, CT
488:
120:
and other styles popular in the 19th century. He served in several civic capacities in the city of
128:. He was the father of Harriet Mulford Stone, better known to readers of children's literature as
1877:
804:
227:
117:
109:
824:
800:
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121:
72:
1428:"Preserving Churches for Community Service | Connecticut Trust For Historic Preservation"
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But of particular interest among Stone's real estate dealings is a property in Milford where
679:
Also of note, the modes Stone used for heating, ventilation and distribution of water in the
640:
512:
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was also modeled after New Haven's Center Church. This building was largely destroyed in the
241:
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and statewide and as mentor to Yale students prior to the establishment of that university's
2444:
2439:
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276:
218:
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54:
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at the age of 24 and Abigail (born 1841). She died on January 17, 1841, at the age of 29.
8:
820:
614:
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way up through the building trades." However, George Dudley Seymour, in his 1942 volume,
200:
147:
134:
113:
1686:
Report of the Treasurer of Yale University, with the Accounts of Its Several Departments
1451:
Snow, W.G., unpublished notes, 1937, on file at New Haven Museum Library, New Haven, CT.
777:
Although six of his original drawings were anonymously donated to the collection of the
240:
Six years later, in 1882, Stone died in his New Haven home at age 79. He was buried in
2317:
1240:
600:
Pelatiah Perit House, now Horchow Hall, Yale School of Management, New Haven, CT (1860)
395:
284:
167:
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which, it appears, is now the Williamsburg Methodist Church in Grand Traverse County.
878:
Carson, Norma Bright, âMargaret Sidney The Writer of the Famous Polly Pepper Booksâ,
857:
751:
697:
623:
379:
233:
Stone remained in New Haven throughout his long career. According to Jerome Lucke's
2105:
Original records on file at the New Haven Historical Society Library, New Haven, CT
669:
155:
1203:
618:. His palatial summer residence was sited in the area that would become known as
572:
1806:"Lauren Soth Architecture Collection :: Lauren Soth Architecture Collection"
1595:"Lauren Soth Architecture Collection :: Lauren Soth Architecture Collection"
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367:
366:
Stone was directed by the building committee to copy Town's Center Church on the
356:
315:
311:
260:
206:
129:
2299:
Miller, Arthur H., Jr., "100 Years : Churches of Saints Patrick and Mary:,
812:
739:
584:
John North House, now Anthropology Dept., Yale University, New Haven, CT (1836)
446:
355:--one of his most successful designs, according to Seymour-- was later used by
302:
1735:
2433:
1112:
The Beacon Guide to New England Houses of Worship: An Architectural Companion
828:
726:
419:
159:
1781:"Photograph - Sidney Stone House :: Treasures of Connecticut Libraries"
1628:
747:
399:
175:
163:
2267:
http://www.bronsonlibrary.org/filestorage/1521/1545/HILL_FINAL%5B1%5D.pdf
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733:
Other land purchases are described in The New Haven Preservation Trust's
552:
333:
306:
223:
101:
596:
1413:
660:
Among Stone's most well-known residential designs still extant are the
1674:
Architecture and Academe: College Buildings in New England Before 1860
762:
Stone's building plans have been published in several books including
487:
in 1849, the idea for which was perhaps inspired by the fact that the
534:
mentions that Stone "gave his services gratuitously" for its design.
426:
Wooster Place Congregational Church, Wooster Square, New Haven (1855)
407:
1380:"New Haven historic building 045a :: WPA Architectural Survey"
580:
453:
Whitewater Congregational Society, Grand Traverse County, MI (1866)
171:
30:
1557:"New Haven historic building 045 :: WPA Architectural Survey"
443:, a Romanesque Revival design also constructed of sandstone; the
2314:"Fall 2010 Newsletter | Lake Forest Preservation Foundation"
1068:, Tuttle, Morehouse and Taylor, Printers: New Haven, 1876, p. 68.
404:, fashioned of ship's siding lumber in the English Gothic style;
1309:"3rd Congregational Church, New Haven. NYPL Digital Collections"
604:
Stone's earliest New Haven residential commissions included the
588:
1510:
The Connecticut Common School Journal and Annals of Education
389:(later Church of the Sacred Heart), built in what is now the
268:
470:
1354:
Notable American Women 1607â1950: A Biographical Dictionary
913:, Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore, MD, 1979, p. 711.
664:(now Center Church Parish House) on Temple Street and the
222:
be drawn that Stone studied under Douglass who, along with
2419:, Tuttle, Morehouse and Taylor, Printers: New Haven, 1942.
2397:, Tuttle, Morehouse and Taylor, Printers: New Haven, 1876.
1756:
https://npgallery.nps.gov/NRHP/GetAsset/NRHP/85002507_text
1329:
https://npgallery.nps.gov/NRHP/GetAsset/NRHP/00000832_text
1264:, Wesleyan University Press: Middletown, CT, 2007, p. 110.
1229:
https://npgallery.nps.gov/NRHP/GetAsset/NRHP/87000636_text
1193:
https://npgallery.nps.gov/NRHP/GetAsset/NRHP/82004409_text
1144:
https://npgallery.nps.gov/NRHP/GetAsset/NRHP/79002664_text
858:"Boston Post Road - Orange Historical Society, Orange, CT"
725:
Stone's property purchases seem to have abated during the
2374:
New Haven : A Guide to Architecture and Urban Design
612:. Hallock, a staunch abolitionist, was the editor of the
2289:
http://www.nps.gov/nhl/designations/samples/ct/Alsop.pdf
507:
announced that Stone was to be the architect of the new
772:
Refinement of America: Persons, Houses, Cities, 2nd Ed.
2176:"The Connecticut Building and Ornamental Stones, 1886"
1156:
Some Old Time Meeting Houses of the Connecticut Valley
576:
Mayor John B. Robertson House, New Haven, CT (c. 1833)
345:
Some Old Time Meeting Houses of the Connecticut Valley
2402:
Henry Austin: In Every Variety of Architectural Style
2339:
Henry Austin: In Every Variety of Architectural Style
1262:
Henry Austin: In Every Variety of Architectural Style
1206:, Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System.
592:
S. M. Stone Residence, Olive Street, New Haven (1848)
184:
Orange Center Historic District (Orange, Connecticut)
2367:
History of the City of New Haven to the Present Time
1043:, R. Herndon Company, Boston, 1901 (pp. 69 & 78)
495:
on State Street in New Haven, was described in the
465:
First Baptist Church, Paterson, New Jersey (1859â60)
230:, also contributed to the building designs for NYU.
485:
entrance gate for the Town of East Haven's Cemetery
430:
New Haven: A Guide to Architecture and Urban Design
256:
St. John's Episcopal Church, North Haven, CT (1834)
209:', taking his first name as her last in his honor.
437:Third Congregational Church, Church Street, (1856)
288:First Congregational Church, West Haven, CT (1859)
2404:, Wesleyan University Press: Middletown, CT, 2007
2142:, The History Press: Charleston, SC, 2007, p. 51.
1845:
1700:Vol. XLVII, Issue 2443, September 17, 1859. p. 2.
1580:Barber, John Warner and Punderson, Lemuel Smith,
992:, American Book Company, New York, 1940, unpaged.
441:Second Presbyterian Church, Columbus, Ohio (1857)
364:Fourth Congregational Church, Hartford, CT (1850)
326:Third Congregational Church, Court Street (1841).
2431:
1130:
1128:
1126:
1124:
1122:
1120:
349:Corner Congregational Church, Meriden, CT (1849)
100:(May 8, 1803 â August 10, 1882) was a prominent
1854:, Vol. L, Issue 2610, November 29, 1862, p. 2.
1783:. Cslib.cdmhost.com. 2001-09-11. Archived from
1559:. Cslib.cdmhost.com. 2001-09-11. Archived from
1382:. Cslib.cdmhost.com. 2001-09-11. Archived from
1039:Chamberlain, Joshua Lawrence, et al., editors,
1030:, New Haven, privately published, 1942, p. 244.
518:Although, in recent writings the design of the
351:is said to have employed a similar design. The
2301:Lake Forest Preservation Foundation Newsletter
2117:, October 8, 1836, Vol. XXIV, Issue 1246, p. 4
1970:, Vol XCVI, Issue 4901, January 1, 1859, p. 2.
1866:, Vol. XVIII, Issue 909, April 24, 1830, p. 3.
1713:, History Press, Charleston, SC., 2007, p. 52.
1523:"Photography exhibit reveals 'lost New Haven'"
1487:, Vol. XLI, Issue, 2146, January 7, 1854 p. 2.
1463:, Vol. XXXIX, Issue 252, October 24, 1879 p.4.
1285:, Vol. XLV, Issue 2283, August 23, 1856, p. 2.
1171:Yale University Press: New Haven, 1979, p. 83.
2255:America Architects and Their Books, 1840â1915
2101:
2099:
2097:
2095:
1925:, Vol XXXII, Issue 18, March 18, 1834, p. 2.
1629:"Patent US30938 - Means foe - Google Patents"
1117:
1101:, Vol. LXII, Issue 3208, April 21, 1829, p. 2
435:Stone was also responsible for designing the
387:South Congregational Church, New Haven (1851)
280:Trinity Episcopal Church, Branford, CT (1852)
272:First Congregational Church, Essex, CT (1852)
146:Sidney Mason Stone was born in what was then
2409:Yale in New Haven: Architecture and Urbanism
2198:, July 9, 1870, Vol. LVIII, Issue 3007, p.2.
2129:, January 18, 1839, Vol. VII, Issue 15, p. 3
1934:City Yearbook, New Haven, Connecticut, 1866.
530:list it among Stone's works, while Barber's
372:First Unitarian Church, Worcester, MA (1850)
2257:, Massachusetts Press: Boston, 2007, p. 153
1913:, Vol LXV, Issue 3362, April 17, 1832, p. 1
1053:VanNostrandâs Eclectic Engineering Magazine
1000:
998:
764:A Book of Plans for Churches and Parsonages
631:boasted a Tuscan style front corner tower.
2422:Shumway, Floyd and Hegel, Richard (eds.),
2140:A Guide to Historic New Haven, Connecticut
2092:
2089:, July 8, 1834, Vol. XXXII, Issue 34, p. 3
2044:Vol XXXVI, Issue 629, June 29, 1870, p. 1.
532:History and Antiquities of New Haven, Conn
522:has been attributed to Henry Austin, both
493:Dawson and Douglas, Sugar Refiners (1854)
29:
2411:, Yale University Press: New Haven, 2004.
2381:A Guide to Historic New Haven Connecticut
2376:, Yale University Press: New Haven, 1976.
2369:, W.W. Munsell & Co.: New York, 1887.
2056:, Vol. XL, Issue 126, May 28, 1880, p. 3.
1711:A Guide to Historic New Haven Connecticut
1475:, Vol. XI, Issue 170, June 22, 1845, p 4.
1356:, Harvard University Press, 1971, p. 431.
1273:Brown, Elizabeth Mills, op. cit., p. 187.
1055:, No. XXXVII, January 1872, Vol VI, p. 5.
1007:Vol XLI, Issue 185, August 11, 1882, p. 2
956:Connecticut Deaths and Burials, 1772â1934
779:Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library
471:Public, commercial and academic buildings
264:Congregational Church, Enfield, CT (1848)
2390:, American Book Company, New York, 1940.
2077:Brown, Elizabeth Mills, op. cit., p. 193
1946:, Vol. XI, Issue 112, May 13, 1843, p. 2
1878:"1st Battalion, 102nd Infantry Regiment"
1169:Buildings and Grounds of Yale University
995:
923:New Haven, Connecticut, City Directories
595:
587:
579:
571:
283:
275:
267:
259:
251:
2424:New Haven : An Illustrated History
2383:, History Press, Charleston, SC., 2007.
1296:New Haven : An Illustrated History
606:Mayor John B. Robertson House (c. 1833)
353:College Street Church, New Haven (1848)
2455:Architects from New Haven, Connecticut
2432:
750:marble had been discovered in 1811 by
414:St. Patrick's Church, New Haven (1853)
322:Westville Society Meeting House (1835)
1875:
1298:, Windsor Publications, 1981, p. 137.
1241:"History of Trinity Episcopal Church"
545:Stone was the architect for both the
1738:. City Point, New Haven, Connecticut
1736:"City Point, New Haven, Connecticut"
1114:, Beacon Press: Boston, 1989, p. 20.
900:Orange Congregational Church Records
686:
674:Jackson Institute for Global Affairs
528:WPA Architectural Survey (1935â1942)
483:Stone was commissioned to design an
416:constructed of East Haven sandstone;
2303:, Vol. 3, Number 3, Fall 2010, p. 3
1979:Shumway, James and Hegel, Richard,
1158:, The Rich Print, 1911, pp. 121-22.
704:
562:Yale Medical School Building (1860)
391:Trowbridge Square Historic District
13:
2359:
1958:, Vol XXXIII, June 21, 1845, p. 3.
299:The History of the New Haven Grays
205:publicationâ. She chose the name '
14:
2476:
1525:. Nhregister.com. 8 February 2009
1204:Historic Building Detail: WOR.704
622:and designed by Stone to emulate
247:
2465:19th-century American architects
2460:Burials at Grove Street Cemetery
2344:
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501:Hartford Railroad Station (1852)
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757:
662:Ezekiel Trowbridge House (1852)
645:at 115 Church Street, and the
451:; and a church built for the
2395:History of the New Haven Grays
2154:Various publishers, 1849-1855.
1688:, Yale University, 1905, p. 32
1066:History of the New Haven Grays
937:
928:
916:
903:
894:
885:
872:
850:
840:
524:History of the New Haven Grays
520:New Haven Orphan Asylum (1855)
235:History of the New Haven Grays
192:Lake Saltonstall (Connecticut)
16:American architect (1803â1882)
1:
2426:, Windsor Publications, 1981.
1430:. Cttrust.org. Archived from
1311:. Digitalcollections.nypl.org
1134:Seymour, George Dudley, Ibid.
1080:, Vol. XLII, Issue 274, p. 1.
834:
735:New Haven Resources Inventory
567:
513:The Lofts at Griffings Square
445:First Congregational Church,
418:First Congregational Church,
406:First Congregational Church,
2388:The Wayside: Home of Authors
1650:, November 6, 1860, p. 4104.
990:The Wayside: Home of Authors
785:
647:Rev. Harry G. Croswell House
330:Stone went on to design the
182:in 1810 and now part of the
141:
7:
2450:Architects from Connecticut
2152:New Haven City Directories,
970:, September 23, 1843, p. 3.
909:Ricker, Jacqueline L, ed.,
882:28 (February 1910): 407-414
860:. Orange Historical Society
666:Pelatiah Perit House (1860)
638:at 75 Wooster Street, the
610:Gerald Hallock House (1836)
467:as one of Stone's designs.
312:St. John's Episcopal Church
292:
10:
2481:
2316:. Lfpf.org. Archived from
738:Street from Nathaniel and
539:New Haven City Jail (1857)
376:1938 New England hurricane
2407:Scully, Vincent, et al.,
1672:Tolles, Bryant Franklin,
1183:, November 28, 1921, p. 7
946:, November 1, 1862, p. 2.
911:Families of Early Milford
774:by R. L. Bushman (2011).
190:in a boating accident on
180:David Hoadley (architect)
87:
79:
61:
40:
28:
21:
2414:Seymour, George Dudley,
2372:Brown, Elizabeth Mills,
2209:"Carnegie Museum of Art"
1838:Brown, Elizabeth Mills,
1825:Brown, Elizabeth Mills,
1808:. Contentdm.carleton.edu
1614:Brown, Elizabeth Mills,
1597:. Contentdm.carleton.edu
1365:Brown, Elizabeth Mills,
1215:Brown, Elizabeth Mills,
1154:Wright, Charles Albert,
1025:Seymour, George Dudley,
794:Those students included
652:In 1848 Stone built the
556:as well as the original
503:. In the same year, the
396:Trinity Episcopal Church
2228:Seymour, George Dudley
2178:. Quarriesandbeyond.org
805:Middletown, Connecticut
654:Thomas Trowbridge House
628:John North House (1836)
551:State Reform School in
547:Alms House in New Haven
385:These were followed by
341:The Connecticut Courant
332:Congregational Church,
228:Alexander Jackson Davis
2386:Lothrop, Margaret M.,
2350:Lothrop, Margaret, M.
2032:, June 23, 1863, p. 2.
2006:Hartford Daily Courant
988:Lothrop, Margaret M.,
944:Hartford Daily Courant
825:Concord, Massachusetts
801:Richard Alsop IV House
716:The Connecticut Herald
601:
593:
585:
577:
537:Stone's plans for the
289:
281:
273:
265:
257:
126:School of Architecture
73:New Haven, Connecticut
2241:Lothrop, Margaret M.
1243:. Trinitybranford.org
649:at 114 Crown Street.
641:Roger Sherman Baldwin
599:
591:
583:
575:
558:Yale Gymnasium (1859)
287:
279:
271:
263:
255:
242:Grove Street Cemetery
150:, and is now part of
2365:Atwater, Edward E.,
2232:, pp. 244 & 246.
1880:. Globalsecurity.org
1676:, UPNE, 2011, p. 40.
1414:"Orbis Basic Search"
1167:Carroll, Richard C.
1110:Smith, G.E. Kidder,
880:The Book New Monthly
636:Solomon Collis House
509:Guilford High School
219:David Bates Douglass
152:Milford, Connecticut
55:Milford, Connecticut
2400:O'Gorman, James F.
2337:O'Gorman, James F.
2030:New Haven Palladium
2018:New Haven Palladium
1968:Connecticut Courant
1911:Connecticut Journal
1260:O'Gorman, James F.
1099:Connecticut Journal
968:Connecticut Courant
821:Nathaniel Hawthorne
615:Journal of Commerce
505:New Haven Palladium
201:Five Little Peppers
166:, founders of the
148:Orange, Connecticut
135:Five Little Peppers
2379:Caplan, Colin M.,
2196:Columbian Register
2115:Columbian Register
2087:Connecticut Herald
2054:New Haven Register
1956:Columbian Register
1923:Connecticut Herald
1897:Luckes, Jerome B.
1864:Columbian Register
1852:Columbian Register
1723:New Haven Register
1709:Caplan, Colin M.,
1698:Columbian Register
1648:The London Gazette
1584:, New Haven, 1856.
1512:, Sept, 1854 1, 9.
1485:Columbian Register
1461:New Haven Register
1283:Columbian Register
1078:New Haven Register
1064:Lucke, Jerome B.,
1005:New Haven Register
602:
594:
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497:Columbian Register
290:
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168:Connecticut Colony
98:Sidney Mason Stone
35:Sidney Mason Stone
23:Sidney Mason Stone
1992:Lucke, Jerome B.
1659:Lucke, Jerome B.
1542:Lucke, Jerome B.,
1348:James, Edward T.
819:, former home of
752:Benjamin Silliman
698:Andrew Hull Foote
687:Civic involvement
681:Shaw House (1862)
624:Kenilworth Castle
380:G. Adolph Johnson
132:, creator of the
95:
94:
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2393:Luckes, Jerome,
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170:and the city of
156:Boston Post Road
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796:E. Townsend Mix
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477:New York Herald
473:
368:New Haven Green
357:Yale University
316:North Haven, CT
295:
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207:Margaret Sidney
144:
130:Margaret Sidney
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65:August 10, 1882
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303:Harry Croswell
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248:Credited works
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69:(aged 79)
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2320:on 2013-10-08
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2019:
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1787:on 2013-11-08
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1563:on 2013-10-14
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1028:illustrations
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829:Orchard House
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803:(1838â39) in
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769:
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727:Panic of 1837
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106:Greek Revival
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20:
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2322:. Retrieved
2318:the original
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2249:
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2229:
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2213:. Retrieved
2203:
2195:
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2180:. Retrieved
2170:
2159:
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2147:
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2134:
2127:Daily Herald
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2110:
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2061:
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2041:
2037:
2029:
2025:
2017:
2013:
2005:
2001:
1993:
1988:
1980:
1975:
1967:
1963:
1955:
1951:
1944:Daily Herald
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1939:
1930:
1922:
1918:
1910:
1906:
1898:
1893:
1882:. Retrieved
1871:
1863:
1859:
1851:
1847:
1839:
1834:
1826:
1821:
1810:. Retrieved
1800:
1789:. Retrieved
1785:the original
1775:
1767:
1762:
1751:
1740:. Retrieved
1730:
1722:
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1710:
1705:
1697:
1693:
1685:
1681:
1673:
1668:
1660:
1655:
1647:
1643:
1632:. Retrieved
1623:
1615:
1610:
1599:. Retrieved
1589:
1581:
1576:
1565:. Retrieved
1561:the original
1551:
1543:
1538:
1527:. Retrieved
1517:
1509:
1505:
1497:
1492:
1484:
1480:
1472:
1468:
1460:
1456:
1447:
1436:. Retrieved
1432:the original
1422:
1408:
1399:
1388:. Retrieved
1384:the original
1374:
1366:
1361:
1353:
1349:
1344:
1335:
1324:
1313:. Retrieved
1303:
1295:
1290:
1282:
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1269:
1261:
1256:
1245:. Retrieved
1235:
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1211:
1199:
1188:
1180:
1176:
1168:
1163:
1155:
1150:
1139:
1111:
1106:
1098:
1094:
1089:Lucke, Ibid.
1085:
1077:
1073:
1065:
1060:
1052:
1048:
1040:
1035:
1026:
1021:
1012:
1004:
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910:
905:
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874:
862:. Retrieved
852:
842:
815:, purchased
809:
793:
789:
776:
771:
767:
763:
761:
758:Publications
748:verd antique
745:
734:
732:
724:
720:
715:
712:
708:
694:
690:
680:
678:
665:
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517:
508:
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489:Henry Austin
484:
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461:
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444:
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417:
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400:Branford, CT
394:
386:
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371:
363:
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176:Robert Treat
164:Samuel Stone
145:
133:
97:
96:
67:(1882-08-10)
2445:1882 deaths
2440:1803 births
2065:Snow, W.B.
1876:John Pike.
1496:Snow, W.G,
925:, 1844-1867
817:The Wayside
553:Meriden, CT
334:Enfield, CT
307:Ithiel Town
224:Ithiel Town
102:Connecticut
80:Nationality
51:May 8, 1803
2434:Categories
2324:2014-01-05
2215:2014-01-05
2211:. Cmoa.org
2182:2014-01-05
1884:2014-01-05
1812:2014-01-05
1791:2014-01-05
1742:2014-01-05
1634:2014-01-05
1601:2014-01-05
1567:2014-01-05
1529:2014-01-05
1438:2014-01-05
1390:2014-01-05
1352:, (Eds.),
1315:2014-01-05
1247:2014-01-05
835:References
620:City Point
568:Residences
118:Italianate
110:Romanesque
88:Occupation
47:1803-05-08
1901:, p. 528.
1829:. p. 106.
1663:pp. 68-69
1618:., p. 54.
864:3 January
786:Influence
408:Essex, CT
215:New Haven
162:and Rev.
142:Biography
122:New Haven
91:Architect
2341:, p. 205
2230:op. cit.
1996:, p. 69.
1899:op. cit.
1840:op. cit.
1770:, p. 51.
1768:Op. cit.
1546:, p. 69.
1369:, p. 107
1367:op. cit.
608:and the
549:and the
526:and the
362:For the
324:and the
293:Churches
172:Hartford
138:series.
83:American
1994:Op.cit.
1842:p. 142.
1827:op. cit
1661:op.cit.
1616:op. cit
1544:Op. Cit
847:0281230
1350:et al.
1219:p. 94.
1217:op.cit
449:(1859)
422:(1855)
410:(1852)
402:(1852)
336:(1848)
320:, the
318:(1834)
114:Gothic
2352:Ibid.
2243:Ibid.
2067:Ibid.
643:House
1981:Ibid
1498:Ibid
866:2014
424:and
226:and
174:and
62:Died
41:Born
823:in
668:on
2436::
2094:^
1500:.)
1119:^
997:^
676:.
412:;
398:,
393:;
382:.
314:,
116:,
112:,
108:,
2327:.
2218:.
2185:.
1983:.
1887:.
1815:.
1794:.
1745:.
1637:.
1604:.
1570:.
1532:.
1441:.
1416:.
1393:.
1318:.
1250:.
868:.
49:)
45:(
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