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182:. He opened his own office in Chicago by 1872, practicing in the city until 1879; from 1875 to 1877 he was a partner in the Chicago firm Willcox and Miller. After 1879 Willcox moved to Nebraska, where he remained through 1881. Willcox was architect of the Nebraska State Capitol building (1879-1882, destroyed), as well as several other institutional structures in Nebraska.
136:(New York: Stringer & Townshend) 1854:239f; the design, which could be well executed in wood for about $ 1500, was described at length in Willcox's own words. In later life Willcox claimed to have been the uncredited architect of Grammar School 51 at 519 West 44th Street, New York City, built in 1858.
223:); the First Baptist Church (Chicago); the main building of Macalester College (St. Paul); the Mercantile Library (Peoria, Illinois); and St. Peter's Protestant Episcopal Church, 1888 (Dayton's Bluff, St. Paul) Willcox and Johnston dissolved their partnership in 1890.
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In 1898 Willcox was unsuccessful in a suit against the First
Baptist Church of Los Angeles to recover design fees for a design submitted the previous year; shortly thereafter he relocated to San Francisco; from San Francisco he designed the public library for
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Building/Washington Shoe
Building) (1891–92), and the Plymouth Congregational Church (1891–92, destroyed)--this church likely reflects Willcox's extensive experience with church design in the Midwest. Boone and Willcox also prepared a plan for the
215:(1859-1936), whom he may have known in New York. Willcox and Johnston never received commercial commissions, but the partnership produced many notable buildings, including the "Summit Terrace" row (St. Paul), of which one was the
234:. Boone and Willcox supervised completion of the spectacular New York Building (1889-1892, demolished), which Boone had already designed. Boone and Willcox together were responsible for design of the J. M. Frink Building (
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campus in 1891, but construction never went forward. Boone and
Willcox dissolved their partnership in June 1892. Willcox had less success on his own, and moved to Los Angeles in 1895 after the
270:, in 1904. After 1907, Willcox may have reduced his activities as an architect and practiced primarily as a surveyor. He retired from practice in San Francisco shortly before World War I.
258:, who later practiced in Fresno, maintained his Los Angeles office at the same address in the Bradbury Block. In 1896 Willcox entered a competition for the design of a new
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and was awarded the commission, though the Board asked the architect to revise his plans to eliminate a central dome and apply the cost savings to a ten-foot basement.
479:(Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2003), 230-234. The Boone and Willcox plan was abandoned before the University of Washington construction proceeded in 1893.
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is coincidental; other competitors were
William J. Cuthbertson of San Francisco, B. G. McDougall of Bakersfield, and S. J. A. Preston of Los Angeles (
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The sanctuary was extended by
Johnston in 1905; the church, now a condominium, is the only nineteenth-century structure remaining in
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Willcox's first appearance is as the designer of a "Suburban
Octagonal Cottage" illustrated in plan and elevation in John Bullock,
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449:; see also Heather M. MacIntosh, "William E. Boone (1830-1921)"; Jeffrey Karl Ochsner, "William E. Boone," in Ochsner, ed.,
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Willcox arrived in
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325:, 1 September 1991, points out that Willcox was listed at a home address of 445 West 44th Street in 1863-64. (
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395:(Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2003), 368 n. 141. A copy of Willcox's book may be found at the
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Hints to Those Who
Propose to Build—Also a Description of Improved Plans for the Construction of Churches
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Willcox's capitol building was replaced in the early 1920s by the current capitol building designed by
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208:(St. Paul: Pioneer Press, 1884), which included a list of his most important projects to that date.
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105:(May 26, 1832 – February 1, 1929) was an American architect and surveyor who practised in
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The architectural fad in mid-nineteenth-century
American house-building is discussed at
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Willcox may have returned briefly to Chicago, but by 1882, he had relocated to
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The American Cottage Builder: A Series of Designs, Plans, and Specifications
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It was constructed by the local builder W.M. Fletcher, according to the
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rowhouses called "Summit Terrace", designed by Johnston and Willcox in
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Distant Corner: Seattle Architects and the Legacy of H. H. Richardson
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Distant Corner: Seattle Architects and the Legacy of H. H. Richardson
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Distant Corner: Seattle Architects and the Legacy of H. H. Richardson
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Distant Corner: Seattle Architects and the Legacy of H. H. Richardson
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Shaping Seattle Architecture: A Historical Guide to the Architects
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Shaping Seattle Architecture: A Historical Guide to the Architects
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466:(Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2003), 198-199, 238-240
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HistoryLink: the Online Encyclopedia of Washington State History
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Minnesota Architect: The Life and Work of Clarence H. Johnston
546:(Historic Fresno): John Edward Powell, "William H. Willcox"
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412:(Afton MN: Afton Historical Society Press, 1996), 45-66.
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For Willcox and Johnston, see: Paul Clifford Larson,
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In 1886 Willcox entered a partnership with the younger
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Christopher Gray, "Streetscapes: Readers' Questions",
197:" structure of red pressed brick, with pale brick and
492:(Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2003), 285.
356:(Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1994), 354.
352:"Willcox, William H.," in Jeffrey Karl Ochsner, ed.,
299:"Antietam in the War" gives 1834, perhaps a misprint.
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296:The year of his birth is generally given as 1832;
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275:Veterans Home of California Yountville
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518:Historic Fresno: William H. Willcox
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397:Minnesota Historical Society
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378:Katharine Lucinda Sharp ,
87:One of the New York-style
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435:"Historic Dayton's Bluff"
221:illustration, above right
217:F. Scott Fitzgerald House
213:Clarence H. Johnston, Sr.
165:Kings County Savings Bank
97:F. Scott Fitzgerald House
273:Willcox was living at a
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241:University of Washington
89:Richardsonian Romanesque
16:Not to be confused with
561:Architects from Seattle
260:Kings County Courthouse
169:Williamsburgh, Brooklyn
514:Kings County, New York
279:Yountville, California
145:95th New York Infantry
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67:Yountville, California
531:Washoe County Archive
236:Washington Iron Works
174:Willcox relocated to
93:Saint Paul, Minnesota
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576:People from Brooklyn
339:Antietam in the War
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187:St. Paul, Minnesota
380:Illinois Libraries
323:The New York Times
199:terracotta details
149:battle of Antietam
141:American Civil War
103:William H. Willcox
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49:Brooklyn, New York
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157:Gettysburg
74:Occupation
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143:with the
77:Architect
115:St. Paul
107:New York
327:On-line
176:Chicago
119:Seattle
111:Chicago
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56:Died
35:Born
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