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                <text>Littell, Emlen T. (1840-1901)</text>
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                <text>Emlen T. Littell was the first designer of the Church of the Incarnation, New York (1864-65). In 1882, fire destroyed most of it; the church was rebuilt in 1882 by David Jardine. In 1896, Heins and La Farge completed the spire. John La Farge painted large murals in the chancel of the church in 1885 and created stained glass windows for the church in 1883 and 1884. Littell was an active member of the New York Chapter of the American Institute of Architects (A.I.A.), and was elected President shortly before his death in 1901.</text>
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                <text>La Farge, Christopher Grant (1862-1938)</text>
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                <text>Christopher Grant La Farge (1862-1938) was the eldest son of the artist John La Farge, and a partner in the firm of Heins and La Farge. Their religious commissions include the Church of the Blessed Sacrament, Providence, RI (1889; tower 1897). The chancel of the First Church, Congregational, Methuen, MA was redesigned by Christopher Grant La Farge, of Heins and La Farge, to accommodate the new stained glass window of The Resurrection by John La Farge, which was installed in 1895. Heins and La Farge were also the architects of Houghton Chapel, Wellesley College, Wellesley, MA (1896).</text>
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                <text>George Louis Heins was the partner of Christopher Grant La Farge (1862-1938) in the firm of Heins and La Farge. Their religious commissions include the Church of the Blessed Sacrament, Providence, RI (1889; tower 1897). The chancel of the First Church, Congregational, Methuen, MA was redesigned by Christopher Grant La Farge, of Heins and La Farge, to accommodate the new stained glass window of The Resurrection by John La Farge, which was installed in 1895. Heins and La Farge were also the architects of Houghton Chapel, Wellesley College, Wellesley, MA (1896).</text>
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                <text>Greene, John Holden (1777-1850)</text>
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                <text>Born in Warwick, Rhode Island in 1777, Greene worked in Providence, where he designed more than fifty buildings for the capital city. Saint John's Cathedral (1810) and the Sullivan-Dorr House (1809-1810) are two of his most notable works in Providence. St. John's Cathedral is an important early example of the Gothic Revival in America.</text>
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                <text>Cathedral Church of St. John </text>
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                <text>Robert Wilson Gibson was born in England, and studied architecture at the Royal Academy of Arts in London. He moved to America, and won a competition to design the All Saints Cathedral in Albany, New York (1888).</text>
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                <text>Alexander Esty was a noted church architect, based in Framingham, MA. He designed Grace Church, Newton, MA (1872), as well as many other churches in the area.</text>
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                <text>Charles Brigham was born in Watertown, MA to an old Watertown family. He enlisted in the Union army in September 1862. After hostilities ceased, he started practicing architecture. At the end of the decade he joined John Hubbard Sturgis to form the firm Sturgis &amp; Brigham. Until the untimely death of his partner some twenty years later, the firm proved very successful. They designed the Boston Museum of Fine Arts (1870-76), the Church of the Advent (1894), and many fine private mansions. After Sturgis died, Brigham designed alone and was responsible for a wide variety of styles across America—from California to the First Church of Christ, Scientist, Boston (1906), a major new wing to the Massachusetts State House, the Maine State House, St. Mark’s Catholic Church, Dorchester, plus many other churches and libraries. &#13;
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                <text>Elbridge Boyden was the architect of the Channing Memorial Church in Newport, Rhode Island (1880). Boyden was a prominent New England architect, best known for his Mechanics Hall (1855) and the Cathedral of St. Paul (1874) in Worcester.</text>
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                <text>J. Williams Beal was a Boston architect who trained at MIT and then worked for McKim, Mead &amp; White before opening his own firm. He designed the All Souls Unitarian Church in Roxbury, MA (1889). It is now the Charles Street African Methodist Episcopal Church, at 551 Warren St., Roxbury, MA. This was the first home of the three stained glass windows now at Boston College.</text>
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                <text>Francis Richmond Allen was the architect of the Thompson Memorial Chapel at Williams College (1905). This Gothic Revival chapel holds the President James Abram Garfield Memorial Window (1882), one of La Farge's most complex window designs. It was commissioned for the Williams College Chapel and dedicated in 1882. The window was first installed in the Stone Chapel (1859) across the street and moved to the new Thompson Memorial Chapel in 1905. He formed a partnership in 1904 with Charles Collens (d. 1956). Their firm later designed the Riverside Church (1928-1930) and The Cloisters (1934-39) in New York City, and the Newton City Hall and War Memorial (1932).</text>
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