词条 | Robert W. Hill |
释义 |
|name = Robert Wakeman Hill |image = File:Robert W. Hill, architect.jpg |image_size = |caption = Robert W. Hill, 1895 |nationality = United States |birth_date = September 20, 1828 |birth_place = Waterbury, Connecticut |death_date = July 16, 1909 |death_place = Waterbury, Connecticut |practice = |significant_buildings= Ansonia Opera House; Waterbury City Hall; Bronson B. Tuttle House; New Britain Opera House; Thomaston Town Hall; Litchfield County Courthouse; Soldiers' Memorial Tower |significant_design = |awards = }} Robert W. Hill (20 September, 1828 – 16 July, 1909) was an American architect from Waterbury, Connecticut. He was one of Connecticut's most important 19th century architects. Life and careerRobert Wakeman Hill was born in Waterbury of September 20, 1828, to Samuel and Polly (Brackett) Hill. He attended the public schools, after which he went to New Haven to study architecture. He first attended the Young Men's Institute, where he learned architectural drawing. He obtained a position in the office of Henry Austin, during which he also taught at the YMI.[1] At one point he was also employed by Sidney Mason Stone.[2] He then worked in Milwaukee, Wisconsin for Albert C. Nash, a former Connecticut architect. In 1858 he returned to Connecticut, establishing himself as an architect in the town of Naugatuck. In 1863 he relocated to Waterbury, where he would quickly become the city's most prominent architect, a position he retained for the rest of his career.[1] LegacyHill trained several other Waterbury architects, including Joseph A. Jackson, Wilfred E. Griggs, and Theodore B. Peck.[1] At least five buildings designed by him have been placed on the National Register of Historic Places, and many others contribute to listed historic districts. Works
Gallery{{Gallery|width=252 |align=center |File:John Kendrick House, Waterbury, CT.jpg |John Kendrick House, Waterbury, 1866. |File:Waterbury Horse on the Green.jpg |Waterbury City Hall, Waterbury, 1869. |File:Thomaston Hose and Hook and Ladder Truck Building 320.jpg |Fire Station, Thomaston, 1882. |File:Riverside Cemetery Waterbury Chapel and Gate.png |Hall Memorial Chapel, Riverside Cemetery, 1883. |File:Thomaston Opera House 323.jpg |Town Hall, Thomaston, 1883. |File:Bank Street Historic District, Waterbury, CT.jpg |Griggs Building, Waterbury, 1884. |File:Litchfield, CT - Superior Court 01 (9374682364).jpg |County Courthouse, Litchfield, 1888. |File:SoldiersMemorialWinstedCT.jpg |Soldiers' Memorial, Winsted, 1890. |File:PostcardBerlinCTLibrary1911.jpg |Berlin Free Library, Berlin, 1891. |File:Torrington0062 YankeePedlar sm.JPG |Conley Inn, Torrington, 1891. |File:Litchfield, CT - Union Savings Bank 01 (9371905123).jpg |Fire Station, Litchfield, 1891. }} References1. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 7 The Town and City of Waterbury, Connecticut. Ed. Joseph Anderson. 1896. {{DEFAULTSORT:Hill, Robert W.}}2. ^"Robert Wakeman Hill". Bronson Library. 3. ^John Kendrick House NRHP Nomination. 1982. 4. ^1 Bethlehem Green Historic District NRHP Nomination. 1982. 5. ^Wiehn, John and Mark Heiss. Postcard History Series: Waterbury 1890-1930. Charleston, SC: Arcadia, 2003. 6. ^Sterner, Daniel. "Chapin Park (1871)". http://historicbuildingsct.com/. 30 March 2010. 7. ^Cothren, William. History of Ancient Woodbury, Connecticut. Vol. 2. 1872. 8. ^Hughes, Sarah E. History of East Haven. New Haven: Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor, 1908. 9. ^Woodbury (CT) Reporter 19 Sept. 1878. 10. ^Bronson B. Tuttle House NRHP Nomination. 1990. 11. ^ Lowell Daily Citizen 12 August 1879. 12. ^New Britain Opera House NRHP Nomination. 1977 13. ^American Architect and Building News 10 April 1880: 160. 14. ^Water Street Historic District NRHP Nomination. 2003. 15. ^American Architect and Building News 28 Oct. 1882: 212. 16. ^Sanitary Engineer 21 June 1883: 67. Chicago. 17. ^Thomaston Opera House NRHP Nomination. 1972. 18. ^Sterner, Daniel. "Walker Hall (Former Watertown Library) (1883)". http://historicbuildingsct.com/. 16 July 2013. 19. ^Bank Street Historic District NRHP Nomination. 1983. 20. ^American Architect and Building News 7 Nov. 1885 : 228. Boston. 21. ^American Architect and Building News 14 Nov. 1885 : 240. Boston. 22. ^American Engineer 10 June 1886: 235-236. New York. 23. ^Sterner, Daniel. "New Britain Armory (1886)". http://historicbuildingsct.com/. 1 Nov. 2013. 24. ^American Architect and Building News 1886: 206. Boston. 25. ^Naugatuck Center Historic District NRHP Nomination. 1999. 26. ^Building 6 Oct. 1888: 3. New York. 27. ^Municipal Register of the City of Waterbury for the Year 1889. Waterbury: Malone & Cooley, 1890. 28. ^"Soldiers' Memorial Tower". Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper: 155. 4 April 1891. New York. 29. ^Library Journal Sept. 1891: 282. 30. ^Sterner, Daniel. "The Yankee Pedlar Inn (1891)". http://historicbuildingsct.com/. 15 Feb. 2012. 5 : 1828 births|1909 deaths|Architects from Connecticut|19th-century American architects|Artists from Waterbury, Connecticut |
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