John H. Burton
John H. Burton was an architect based in Salt Lake City, Utah.
He was a young architect when joined by Richard K.A. Kletting.[1]
His plans for the Territorial Insane Asylum (completed in 1885) in Provo, Utah were completed after his death around 1884 by his intern/apprentice/colleague Richard K.A. Kletting,[2] Kletting later became the leading architect in Utah.
He worked with partner named either Pope or Hope.
- Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church (1923?), 279 S. 200 West, Salt Lake City (Pope & Burton), NRHP-listed. If built in 1923, then not a work of John H. Burton. Consecrated in 1925, so no.
- Tribune Building, 137 S. Main, Salt Lake City, (Hope & Burton), NRHP-listed
See also
- Harold W. Burton, later architect in Utah, partner in Pope & Burton
References
- Charles M. Shepherd (Fall 2009). "Richard k.A. Kletting (1858-1943) - Leading Utah Architect" (PDF). The Utah Heritage Foundation Newsletter.
- "Utah State Hospital". AsylumProjects.Org. Retrieved May 25, 2019.
External links
- True Earth, Mud Architects Exposed, John H Burton, is he a phantom?, YouTube blog-like video
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