HDB/Cram and Ferguson
Corporation | |
Founded | 1889 |
Headquarters | Boston, Massachusetts, United States |
Products | Architectural design |
Hoyle, Doran & Berry, Inc., also known as HDB/Cram and Ferguson, was the successor firm to the original partnership of Ralph Adams Cram, Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue, and Frank Ferguson, their structural engineer making the firm one of the earliest A/E firms. Hoyle, Doran and Berry, Inc. was dissolved in 2011. Ethan Anthony, AIA ICTP now leads the practice as Cram and Ferguson Architects LLC.
The original partnership was founded in 1889 by the "preeminent American Ecclesiastical Gothicist"[1] Ralph Adams Cram and Charles Francis Wentworth. In 1890 they were joined by Bertram Goodhue, who was made a partner in 1895. In 1913 the name was changed to "Cram & Ferguson."
Historic projects
- The Cathedral of St John the Divine in New York City, New York
- Currier Art Gallery in Manchester, New Hampshire
- The Old John Hancock Building, 200 Berkeley Street, Boston, Massachusetts
- West Point Military Academy (1904), West Point, New York
- All Saints' Church, Ashmont, Massachusetts
- Rice University, Houston, Texas
References
- ↑ Jay C. Henry, Architecture in Texas 1895-1945, University of Texas Press (1993), p. 104, ISBN 0-292-73072-1
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