John Fraser (architect)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/John_Fraser_(architect) an entity of type: Thing

جون فرازير (بالإنجليزية: John Fraser)‏ هو مهندس معماري أمريكي، ولد في 18 أكتوبر 1825 في شط، وتوفي في 26 ديسمبر 1906. rdf:langString
John Fraser (October 18, 1825 – December 26, 1906) was a Scottish-born American architect who practiced in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and Washington, D.C. His most significant surviving building is the Union League of Philadelphia (1864–65), a High Victorian, Second Empire gentlemen's club constructed of brick and brownstone. His career is overshadowed by that of his former student and one-time partner, Frank Furness (Fraser, Furness & Hewitt: 1867-71), whose influence is visible in Fraser's Washington, D.C. mansions for James G. Blaine and John T. Brodhead. rdf:langString
rdf:langString جون فرازير (مهندس معماري)
rdf:langString John Fraser (architect)
rdf:langString John Fraser
rdf:langString John Fraser
xsd:date 1906-12-26
xsd:date 1825-10-18
xsd:integer 14203934
xsd:integer 1093083134
xsd:date 1825-10-18
xsd:date 1906-12-26
rdf:langString جون فرازير (بالإنجليزية: John Fraser)‏ هو مهندس معماري أمريكي، ولد في 18 أكتوبر 1825 في شط، وتوفي في 26 ديسمبر 1906.
rdf:langString John Fraser (October 18, 1825 – December 26, 1906) was a Scottish-born American architect who practiced in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and Washington, D.C. His most significant surviving building is the Union League of Philadelphia (1864–65), a High Victorian, Second Empire gentlemen's club constructed of brick and brownstone. His career is overshadowed by that of his former student and one-time partner, Frank Furness (Fraser, Furness & Hewitt: 1867-71), whose influence is visible in Fraser's Washington, D.C. mansions for James G. Blaine and John T. Brodhead. He served as acting supervisory architect for the U.S. Treasury (December 1878 - May 1879), created a master plan for the U.S. Capitol grounds, and served on the commission to complete Robert Mills's Washington Monument. He was one of the founders of the Philadelphia chapter of the American Institute of Architects. He maintained a residence in Riverton, New Jersey, and designed a number of buildings there. By 1888, he had entered into a partnership with his son Archibald, and continued working until about 1902. He died in Philadelphia and is interred at The Woodlands Cemetery.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 5476

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