Charles S. Hayes Stained Glass Design Drawings

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Charles S. Hayes Stained Glass Design Drawings

Circa 1924-1948

This collection of stained glass presentation drawings and cartoons is divided into four series by originating stained glass studio or designer: (1) Henry Keck Stained Glass Studio (2) Reynolds, Francis and Rohnstock (3) Harry Wright Goodhue (4) Wilbur H. Burnham Studios

6.5 Linear Feet (1 Hollinger box, 3 flat boxes)

eng, Latn

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Wilbur H. Burnham Studios

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Boston, Massachussets stained glass design firm, Wilbur H. Burnham Studios, was founded by master stained glass craftsman Wilbur H. Burnham, in 1922. Together with Charles J. Connick and Joseph G. Reynolds, Burnham studios became recognized as one of the most prominent stained glass design companies in the United States. Burnham took early commissions from influential American architect Ralph Adams Cram, and believed strongly in the medieval stained glass tradition. In the late 193...

Reynolds, Francis, and Rohnstock.

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The Boston firm of Reynolds, Francis and Rohnstock opened in 1921. Joseph Reynolds Jr. (1886-1972) was the designer and director of the firm, William M. Francis (1870-1954) was the glass painter, and J. Henry Rohnstock (1879-1956) was the glazier. Joseph Reynolds collaborated with Ralph Adams Cram, a Boston architect, on many installations. Cram was a preeminent American Ecclesiastical Gothicist and a prominent spokesman for Gothic-style churches. Their projects include Princeton University and ...

Goodhue, Harry Wright

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Harry Wright Goodhue was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the eldest son of Boston stained glass artist Harry Eldredge Goodhue and Mary Louise Wright Goodhue. Wright Goodhue trained with his father before opening his own studio in 1924. During his short career he designed windows for over thirty churches, including commissions by well-known architects such as Ralph Adams Cram and his uncle, Bertram G. Goodhue. He died in 1931 at the age of 26....

Henry Keck Stained Glass Studio

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Henry Keck learned the art of stained glass making as an apprentice at the Tiffany Studios in New York City. After relocating upstate with his family, Keck established The Henry Keck Design Studio in Syracuse, New York in 1913. At the time, Syracuse had become a center for the American Arts and Crafts Movement and the Keck Studio worked with local architects to produce many residential windows in addition to those for they made for religious buildings. Following Henry Keck's death in 1956, S...