Hewitt & Brown
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Hewitt & Brown
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Hewitt & Brown
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Edwin Hewitt was born in Red Wing MN. He attended Hobart College for a year before completing his degree at the University of Minnesota. While studying at the University, Hewitt also attended the Minneapolis School of Fine Arts at night and worked in the office of Cass Gilbert during vacations. Hewitt studied at MIT for a year, and entered the office of Shepley, Rutan & Coolidge in Boston, where he worked three and a half years. He then studied four more years at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris. In 1904, he returned to Minneapolis and practiced alone until 1910 when he formed a partnership with Edwin Brown. Hewitt worked alone after Brown's death in 1930, and in 1937 became chief architectural supervisor of the Federal Housing Administration for the Minneapolis area.
Edwin Hewitt was born in Red Wing, Minnesota, on March 26, 1874. He was the son of a distinguished surgeon who practiced in the Mississippi River town. Hewitt attended the public schools of Red Wing and went on to Hobart College, Geneva, NY, for a year before returning to complete his college undergraduate work at the University of Minnesota. While at the University, he attended the Minneapolis School of Fine Arts at night and worked in the office of Cass Gilbert during vacations. Following graduation from the University, Hewitt studied for a year at MIT before entering the office of Shepley, Rutan, & Coolidge of Boston. He worked there for three and a half years, then journeyed to Paris where he studied for four years at the École des Beaux Arts. In 1904 he returned to Minneapolis and set up his own practice, and in 1910, he entered into a partnership with Edwin Brown, which lasted until Brown's death in 1930. Hewitt resumed private practice, but his firm languished without Brown's keen business sense and the office closed in the early 1930s. Hewitt was appointed chief architectural supervisor of the Federal Housing Administration for the Minneapolis area (1935-1937). He died in Minneapolis on August 11, 1939.
Edwin Brown was born in Worcester, Massachusetts, on July 27, 1875. He attended Harvard University and graduated in 1896 with a Bachelor of Arts degree. He then entered Worcester Polytechnic Institute where he received a S.B. degree. After moving to Minneapolis in 1910, he formed a partnership with Edwin H. Hewitt. During World War I, Brown served in America and Europe in the Red Cross. He returned to Minneapolis after the war to resume his architecture practice with Hewitt. Brown established the Architects Small House Service Bureau in 1920, an organization that eventually became national in scope, which provided architect-produced plans for inexpensive houses that would help alleviate the post-war housing shortage. Brown died on April 21, 1930 in Minneapolis.
Edwin Hewitt and the partnership of Hewitt & Brown were responsible for the design of many important buildings in Minneapolis, including the Hennepin Avenue Methodist Church, Dunwoody Institute, St. Mark's Episcopal Cathedral, Northwestern Bell Telephone Building, Gateway Park and Arcade, and residences for George Christian (now the Hennepin County Historical Society), E.J. Carpenter, William Bovey and Charles A. Pillsbury.
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https://viaf.org/viaf/260989548
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Architecture
Architecture
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Minnesota--Minneapolis
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Minneapolis (Minn.)
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<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>