This is a list of the works of the architect Alfred C. Finn.
Chronological list
Name | City | Address | Year | NRHP-listed? | Status | Type of Work | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Great Jones Building[1] | Houston | 708 Main Street | 1908 | Attributed to Sanguinet & Staats, with possible assistance from Finn | |||
A. S. Cleveland House[2] | Houston | 8 Courtlandt Place | 1911 | Yes | Architect | With Sanguinet & Staats | |
James L. Autry House, Courtlandt Place[2] | Houston | 5 Courtlandt Place | 1912 | Yes | Architect | With Sanguinet & Staats | |
Link-Lee House[3] | Houston | 3800 Montrose | 1912 | Yes | St. Thomas University campus | Architect | With Sanguinet & Staats |
Rice Hotel[4] | Houston | 790 Texas Avenue | 1913 | Yes | Post Lofts | Supervising Architect | Designed by Mauran, Russell & Crowell. |
Foster Building[4] | Houston | 801 Texas Avenue | 1914 | Demolished 2017 | Designing Architect | AKA, The Houston Chronicle Building | |
Rusk Building[4] | Houston | Texas and Travis | 1916 | Demolished 2017 | Designing Architect | Later annexed to the Houston Chronicle Building | |
Sterling-Berry House[5] | Houston | 4515 Yoakum Boulevard | 1916 | Yes | Architect | Portico added in 1919 | |
Henry H. Dickson House | Houston | 3614 Montrose | 1917 | Architect | |||
Humble Gas Station[4] | Houston | Main Street at Jefferson | 1918 | Architect | |||
Woodward House[6] | Houston | 1605 Heights Boulevard | 1918 | yes | Architect | ||
Jones-Hunt House[2] | Houston | 24 Courtlandt Place | 1920 | Yes | Architect | ||
Earl K. Wharton House[4] | Houston | 12 Remington Lane | 1920 | Architect | |||
Sid Westheimer House[4] | Houston | Montrose | 1920 | Yes | Architect | ||
L.A. and Adelheid Machemehl House | Bellville, Texas | 1920 | Yes | Architect | |||
International & Great Northern Hospital[7] | Palestine, Texas | 919 S. Magnolia | 1922 | Architect | |||
Melba Theatre[4] | Dallas | 1913 Elm | 1922 | Demolished 1971 | Designing Architect | Built for John T. and Jesse H. Jones | |
Walter Fondren House[4] | Houston | 3410 Montrose | 1922 | Designing Architect | |||
State National Bank Building (Houston, Texas)[8] | Houston | 412 Main | 1923 | yes | Designing Architect | ||
Houston Light Guard Armory[4] | Houston | 1925 | Houston Buffalo Soldiers Museum[9] | Designing Architect | |||
Simon Theatre[4] | Brenham, Texas | 1925 | Designing Architect | Part of the Brenham Downtown Historic District, NRHP-listed district | |||
Hermann Hospital[10] | Houston | Texas Medical Center | 1925 | Associate Architect | |||
Lamar Hotel[4] | Houston | 1926 | Demolished | Designing Architect | |||
Metropolitan Theater[11] | Houston | 1018 Main Street | 1926 | Demolished 1973 | Supervising Architect | Designed by Jordan MacKenzie | |
Coca-Cola Bottling Plant | Houston | 707 Live Oak Street | 1926 | Demolished 2007 | |||
Loew's State Theater[12] | Houston | 1022 Main Street | 1927 | Demolished 1973 | Supervising Architect | Designed by Victor E. Johnson | |
Kirby Building[4] | Houston | 1927 | Designing Architect | ||||
Ross S. Sterling House[4] | Bay Ridge, Texas | 1928 | Designing Architect | ||||
The Smart Shop | Houston | 905 Main Street | 1928 | ||||
Sam Houston Hall[13] | Houston | 801 Bagby | 1928 | Demolished in 1936 | Architect | With Kenneth Franzheim. Replaced by the Sam Houston Coliseum. Now the site of the Hobby Center for the Performing Arts. | |
Scottish Rite Cathedral (Galveston, Texas) | Galveston | 2128 Church Street | 1928 | Yes | |||
Worth Hotel and Worth Theater[4] | Fort Worth, Texas | 1928 | Designing Architect | With Wyatt C. Hedrick | |||
Krupp and Tuffly Building | Houston | 901 Main Street | 1929 | ||||
Gulf Building[4] | Houston | 712 Main Street | 1929 | Yes | Designer | With Kenneth Franzheim and J.E.R. Carpenter. Tallest building in Houston from 1929 to 1963. NRHP-listed. | |
William Lewis Moody III House[14] | Galveston | 16 South Cedar Lawn | 1929 | Managing office | Design credit to Robert C. Smallwood. Contributing property to the Cedar Lawn Historic District (NRHP-listed) | ||
St. Paul's United Methodist Church[15] | Houston | Main St. | 1930 | Designing architect | |||
Forest Hill Abbey mausoleum[4] | Kansas City, Missouri | 1931 | Designing Architect | ||||
People's National Bank Building[4] | Tyler, Texas | 102 N. College Avenue | 1932 | Yes | Designing Architect | ||
Jefferson Davis Hospital[16] | Houston | 1801 Allen Parkway | 1937 | Demolished 1999 | Designer | With Joseph Finger | |
Sam Houston Coliseum and Houston Music Hall[17] | Houston | 801 Bagby St | 1937 | Demolished 1998 | Architect | ||
Galveston US Post Office, Custom House and Courthouse[4] | Galveston | 601 25th Street | 1937 | Yes | NRHP-listed in 2001 | ||
San Jacinto Monument[4] | La Porte | 1 Monument Circle | 1938 | Located at the Battle of San Jacinto Battlefield National Historic Landmark District | |||
Texas A&M University dormitory complex[4] | College Station, Texas | 1940 | Designing Architect | ||||
U.S. Naval Hospital[4] | Houston | 1945 | Demolished | Designing Architect | Also used as a Veterans Administration Hospital | ||
City National Bank Building[4] | Houston | 921 Main street | 1946-47 | Yes | Or located at 1001 McKinney Ave. NRHP-listed in 2000. | ||
First National Bank of Goose Creek | Baytown | 300 West Texas Avenue | 1948 | ||||
Ezekiel W. Cullen Building[4] | Houston | University of Houston | 1950 | University of Houston administration building; performance hall | |||
Sakowitz Bros. Department Store[4] | Houston | 1111 Main Street | 1951 | ||||
Arabia Temple Crippled Children's Hospital[4] | Houston | 1952 | Designing Architect | Texas Medical Center | |||
First National Bank building[4] | Longview, Texas | 1956 | Designing Architect | ||||
Ben Taub Hospital[4] | Houston | 1963 | Designing Architect | With C. A. Johnson and H. E. Maddox. | |||
References
- ↑ Gonzales, J. R. (14 December 2010). "The evolution of the Great Jones Building". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 19 October 2018.
- 1 2 3 "Historic Preservation Manual: Courtlandt Place". Retrieved 10 September 2018.
- ↑ "Link-Lee House". NPGallery Digital Asset Management System. National Park Service. Retrieved 11 September 2018.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 Fox, Stephen (13 February 2017). "Finn, Alfred Charles". Texas Handbook Online. Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved 10 September 2018.
- ↑ Fox, Stephen; Stem, Susan Boger (November 1982). "National Register of Historic Places Form: Sterling-Berry House" (PDF). Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Retrieved 4 November 2018.
- ↑ London, K. L. (2 April 1980). "National Register of Historic Places Form: Woodward House" (PDF). Texas Historic Site Atlas. Retrieved 3 November 2018.
- ↑ "[I&GN Railroad Hospital - 919 S. Magnolia]". Portal to Texas Online. Retrieved 26 September 2018.
- ↑ Axelrad, Herbert L. (8 July 1982). "National Register of Historic Places Form: State National Bank Building" (PDF). Texas Historic Sites Atlas. pp. 1, 5. Retrieved 2 November 2018.
- ↑ Fox, Stephen (1 July 2015). "forWARDS: A Driving Tour of Houston's Third Ward, Part 3". Off Cite. Rice Design Alliance. Retrieved 5 November 2018.
- ↑ Johnston, Marguerite (1991). Houston: The Unknown City, 1836–1946. College Station: Texas A&M University Press. p. 249. ISBN 0-89096-476-9.
- ↑ Welling (2007), p. 68.
- ↑ Welling (2007), pp. 74, 82
- ↑ Fenberg (2011), pp. 140–141.
- ↑ "National Register of Historic Places Form: Cedar Lawn Historic District" (PDF). Texas Historic Sites Atlas. 22 October 2002. p. 17. Retrieved 2 November 2018.
- ↑ Henry (1993), pp. 104–105.
- ↑ Strom (2010), p. 55.
- ↑ Strom, Stephen R. "A Legacy of Civic Pride: Houston's PWA Buildings" (PDF). Houston History Magazine. Retrieved 26 March 2018.
Bibliography
- Fenberg, Stephen (2011). Unprecedented Power: Jesse Jones, Capitalism, and the Common Good. College Station: Texas A&M University Press.
- Henry, Jay C. (2009). Architecture in Texas, 1895−1945. Austin: University of Texas Press.
- Strom, Steven R. (2010). Houston: Lost and Unbuilt. Austin: University of Texas Press.
- Welling, David (2007). Cinema Houston: From Nickelodeon to Cineplex. Austin: University of Texas Press.
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