Watson & Huckel

Watson & Huckel was an architectural firm from Philadelphia that existed as a partnership between Frank Rushmore Watson and Samuel Huckel between 1902 and 1917. The firm was known as a prolific office that had many church commissions—Watson specialized in church architecture and Huckel worked with him until 1917, the year of his (Huckel's) death; the pair worked on many projects from Worcester Union Station to the Cumberland County Courthouse and a great deal of churches. During the early years of their partnership, Watson and Huckel maintained a New York office, however few projects were listed out of that office and they did eventually close it.[2]

Watson & Huckel
Practice information
Partners
Founded1902 (1902)
Dissolved1917 (1917)
LocationPhiladelphia
Significant works and honors
Buildings

See also

References

  1. "Portfolio of Current Architecture". The Architectural Record. 115–119 West 40th Street, New York: The Architectural Record Co. 39: 40. January–June 1916.CS1 maint: location (link)
  2. Sandra L. Tatman. "Watson & Huckel (fl. 1902–1917)". The Philadelphia Architects and Buildings Project. Retrieved 16 Nov 2018.
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