Schulze, Paul, 1827 or 1828-1897

Paul Schulze was an architect in Boston, Ma. and later, New York City. Born in Breslau, he received is art training in Berlin and Vienna. He emigrated to Boston in 1849, where he designed buildings for Harvard College. In 1858, Schulze settled in New York and practiced with Charles Gildemeister (1860), Paul F. Schoen (1866-1875), and William G. Steinmetz (1875-1876). In 1877, Schulze moved to Washington, D.C. and entered into partnership with Adolph Cluss (1878-1889). He designed and supervised the construction of several government buildings. Schulze submitted designs to the major competitions, and he worked in the Rundbogenstil and Second Empire style. He published a lithographic series of designs for funerary monuments in the 1850s. Schulze was the founder and president of the Palette Club in the 1870s. He died in San Francisco, Ca. in 1897.

From the description of Architectural drawings, 1853. (Winterthur Library). WorldCat record id: 84666318

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