Densmore and LeClear
Densmore and LeClear was an architecture firm based in Boston, active from 1897 through 1942.
The founding principals were Edward Dana Densmore (1871–1926)[1] and Gifford LeClear (1874–1931) in 1897, organizing as an engineering firm. Both were engineering graduates of Harvard University, and LeClear returned to Harvard as a lecturer and professor. With the addition of Henry C. Robbins in July 1914, another Harvard-trained architect, the firm was known as Densmore, LeClear and Robbins.
Their designs include:
- Paine Furniture Building, 75–81 Arlington Street, Boston, Massachusetts, 1914
- Vose & Sons Piano Company Building, Wooley Avenue, Watertown, Massachusetts, 1922, later converted to Watertown Arsenal Building #39
- Egleston Theatre, 3091 Washington Street, Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, 1926 (razed 2003)[2] [3]
- Salada Tea Company Building, 330 Stuart Street, Boston, 1927[4]
- Waban Branch Library, 1608 Beacon Street, Newton, Massachusetts, 1929
- New England Telephone and Telegraph, 6 Bowdoin Square, Boston, 1930
- Metropolitan District Commission Headquarters, 20 Somerset Street, Boston, 1930[5]
- Bangor Telephone Exchange Building, Bangor, Maine, 1931
- First Church of Christ, Scientist, Newton, Massachusetts, 1940
References
- Edward Dana Densmore at archINFORM. Retrieved 10 July 2011.
- http://cinematreasures.org/theater/18829/ accessed 11/7/10
- http://www.jphs.org/locales/2005/9/30/egleston-square-by-richard-heath.html accessed 11/7/10
- AIA Guide to Boston By Susan Southworth, Michael Southworth, page 138
- https://www.cityofboston.gov/environment/pdfs/mdc_06.pdf accessed 11/7/10
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