词条 | N. Lester Troast |
释义 |
|name = N. Lester Troast |image = |image_size = |caption = |nationality = United States |birth_date = July 20, 1899 |birth_place = |death_date = October 9, 1958 |death_place = Clifton, New Jersey |practice = N. L. Troast; N. L. Troast & Associates |significant_buildings= |significant_design = |awards = }} N. Lester Troast (1899–1958)[1] was an American architect from Sitka and Juneau, Alaska, who was one of the first professional architects to practice in Alaska. Life and careerTroast began his career in the 1920s, as a teacher at Sitka's Sheldon Jackson School. Circa 1930, he left the school and established an architect's office in Sitka. At that time, he was noted as Alaska's only professional architect.[2] Later that year he moved his office to Juneau, the largest city in the then-territory. He quickly associated with William A. Manley, who would become a partner in N. Lester Troast & Associates in 1935. Manley was sent to Anchorage in late 1937 to open an office for the firm in that city.[3] Troast moved to New Jersey, and Manley opened his own Anchorage office in 1941. In New Jersey, Troast lived in Clifton, and was associated with the family firm, the Mahoney-Troast Construction Company, headquartered in Passaic. William Manley would go on to have a notable career as the senior partner in the Anchorage firm of Manley & Mayer. WorksN. Lester Troast, before 1935
N. Lester Troast & Associates, 1935-1941
References1. ^"N. Lester Troast (1899-1958)". http://public.aia.org/. n.d. Web. {{DEFAULTSORT:Troast, N. Lester}}2. ^1 Fairbanks (AK) Daily News-Miner 28 July 1930: 8. 3. ^Alaska Miner 10 May 1938: 11. 4. ^"Sage Building". http://hcap.artstor.org/. n.d. Web. 5. ^1 Hoagland, Alison K. Buildings of Alaska. 1993. 6. ^{{NRHP url|id=88002534|title=Mayflower School NRHP Nomination}}. 1988. 7. ^Alanen, Arnold R. "Midwesterners in the Matanuska Valley: Colonizing Rular Alaska during the 1930s". People, Power, Places: Perspectives in Vernacular Architecture. Ed. Sally McMurry and Annmarie Adams. Knoxville, TN: University of Tennessee Press, 2000. 8. ^Western Architect and Engineer 1935: 71. 9. ^Hoagland, Alison K. Buildings of Alaska. New York: Oxford University Press, 1993. 10. ^"231 S. Franklin Street". http://www.juneau.org/. n.d. Web. 11. ^"1 February 1980 issue". http://www.juneau.org/. n.d. Web. 12. ^http://www.aelp.com/history/revised/centennial/p2.pdf 13. ^1 Loussac-Sogn Building NRHP Nomination. 1998. 14. ^"Douglas City Hall Blueprints 1937". http://www.juneau.org/. 6 June 2015. 15. ^South Addition Historic Context Statement & Building Survey. 2012. 6 : 1899 births|1958 deaths|20th-century American architects|Architects from Alaska|Architects from New Jersey|People from Juneau, Alaska |
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