Residence for Mrs. Lucretia R. Garfield at Pasadena, Cal. [graphic] / Greene & Greene, Architects. [1903]

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Residence for Mrs. Lucretia R. Garfield at Pasadena, Cal. [graphic] / Greene & Greene, Architects. [1903]

7 drawings : various media ; 61.3 x 61.9 cm. (24 1/8 x 24 3/8 in.) or smaller.

Related Entities

There are 4 Entities related to this resource.

Greene & Greene.

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By 1917 "the Culbertson sisters...could no longer afford..the property. It was purchased by Mrs. Dudley P. (Elisabeth S.) Allen...who shortly remarried and became Mrs. Francis Fleury Prentiss."--Edward R. Bosley / Greene & Greene. London : Phaidon, 2000, p.160. Bosley dates the house to 1911-13. Bosley lists the job number as 273. From the description of Floor plan [and] part plan of basement [graphic] / [Greene & Greene, architects]. [not...

Garfield, Lucretia Rudolph, 1832-1918

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Lucretia Rudolph Garfield served as First Lady of the United States in 1881 until the assassination of her husband, President James A. Garfield. In the fond eyes of her husband, President James A. Garfield, Lucretia “grows up to every new emergency with fine tact and faultless taste.” She proved this in the eyes of the nation, though she was always a reserved, self-contained woman. She flatly refused to pose for a campaign photograph, and much preferred a literary circle or informal party to ...

Greene, Charles Sumner, 1868-1957

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Charles Sumner Greene was an Arts and Crafts style architect whose design practice included large residences throughout California as well as furniture and other decorative arts. He practiced with his brother, Henry Mather Greene, for part of his career under the firm name Greene & Greene. From the description of Charles Sumner Greene collection, 1862-1956. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 77707396 Biography Charles Sum...

Greene, Henry Mather, 1870-1954

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"The Reeve house has been moved twice in its long history of changing ownership. In 1917 Dr. V. Ray Townsend found the house on blocks ready to be carted away from its original site. He bought it and moved it several blocks inland to its second site in Long Beach. Shortly thereafter he moved to the Claremont area but, unwilling to give it up, rented it out for the next ten years. Meanwhile , in Claremont, the Townsends located the Darling house (1903) in which they resided until 1927 when Henry ...