Furness & Evans
Furness & Evans was a Philadelphia architectural partnership, established in 1881, between noted architect Frank Furness and his former chief draftsman, Allen Evans. In 1886, other employees were made partners, and the firm became Furness, Evans & Company. George Howe worked in the firm and later became a partner at Mellor & Meigs, another Philadelphia firm.
A number of its works are listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places.[1]
Buildings include (with attribution):
- Undine Barge Club, #13 Boat House Row, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1882–83, (Furness & Evans), NRHP-listed.[1]
- Hockley Row, 237-241 South 21st Street and 2049 Locust Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1883, (Furness and Evans), NRHP-listed.[1] Allen Evans probably designed this speculative row of houses (his father was the client).
- St. Michael's Protestant Episcopal Church, Parish House and Rectory, Mill & Church Streets, Birdsboro, Pennsylvania, 1885-86, (Furness & Evans), NRHP-listed.[1]
- Ormonde, East Lake Road & Ormonde Drive, Cazenovia, New York, 1885–88, (Furness, Frank; Furness & Evans), NRHP-listed.[1]
- Solomon House, 130-132 South 17th Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1887, (Furness & Evans), NRHP-listed.[1] Part of a speculative row of houses built for Caroline Rogers.
- University of Pennsylvania Library, 34th Street below Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1888–90, (Furness, Frank; Furness, Evans, & Co.), NRHP-listed.[1]
- Bryn Mawr Hotel, Morris & Montgomery Avenues, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, 1890, (Furness, Frank; Furness, Evans, & Co.), NRHP-listed.[1] Now the Baldwin School.
- Recitation Hall and Oratory Building, University of Delaware, Main & College Streets, Newark, Delaware, 1891, (Furness & Evans), NRHP-listed.[1] Contributing structures in Old College Historic District.
- Horace Jayne House, 320 South 19th Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1895, (Furness, Evans & Co.), NRHP-listed.[1] Mrs. Jayne was Furness's niece Caroline.
- St. Luke's Church, Kensington, and Parish House - East Huntington and B Streets, Philadelphia (1904-05). Designed by Allen Evans.
- Wilmington Amtrak Station, Front & French Streets, Wilmington, Delaware, 1908, (Furness, Evans & Co.), NRHP-listed.[1]
- Zurbrugg Mansion, 531 Delaware Avenue, Delanco, New Jersey, 1910, (Furness, Evans & Co.), NRHP-listed.[1]
- John Stewart Memorial Library, Wilson College, 1015 Philadelphia Avenue, Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, 1923, (Furness, Evans & Co., et al.), NRHP-listed.[1] Designed by Allen Evans.
See also
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Furness & Evans. |
This article is issued from
Wikipedia.
The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike.
Additional terms may apply for the media files.