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                <text>Allen, Francis Richmond (d. 1931)</text>
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                <text>Allen, Francis Richmond, 1843-1931</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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                <text>Boston College University Libraries</text>
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                <text>Thompson Memorial Chapel</text>
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                <text>Beal, J. Williams (1855-1919)</text>
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                <text>Beal, J. Williams, 1855-1919</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>Boston College University Libraries</text>
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                <text>All Souls Unitarian Church / Charles Street African Methodist Episcopal Church</text>
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                <text>Boyden, Elbridge (1810-1898)</text>
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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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        <name>St. Barnabas and the Virgin - Rev. Barnabas Bates Memorial Window</name>
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                <text>Brigham, Charles (c. 1841-1925)</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>Bryant, Gridley J.F. (1816-1899)</text>
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                <text>Bryant was the architect of the Gothic Revival First Church, Salem, MA (1835). Later he partnered with Arthur Gilman, and together they designed the Old City Hall in Boston (1862-65) in a Second Empire Baroque style and helped design the grid layout of the streets in the Back Bay.</text>
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                <text>Damon was an architect in Haverhill, MA and one of the earliest graduates of the new architecture program at M.I.T. Damon was the original designer of the First Church, Congregational in Methuen, MA (1855/1882). The chancel of this church 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.</text>
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                <text>Deshon, Father George (1823-1903)</text>
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                <text>Jeremiah O'Rourke (1833-1915) and Father George Deshon were the architects of the Church of St. Paul the Apostle in New York, NY (1874-89). Father Deshon was one of the founding members of the new Paulist order.</text>
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                <text>Born in Brattleboro, Vermont in August 1846, Mead went to Norwich University and graduated from Amherst College in 1867. He began studying architecture in New York and then spent some time in Florence, Italy. Upon returning to New York, he struck up a professional partnership with Charles F. McKim. Two years later, in 1879, they were joined by Stanford White and named the firm McKim, Mead &amp; White. Together they comprised the leading architectural practice in the United States. Even after the death of the other two principals, Mead continued to head the firm, which worked on many prestigious projects. In 1913 Mead became the first architect to be awarded the gold medal from the Academy of Arts and Letters. Among many other honors, he became a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects, and president of the New York Chapter between 1907-08. King Victor Emmanuel made him a Knight Commander of the Crown of Italy in 1922 for his contribution to the introduction of Roman and Italian Renaissance architectural styles to America. A notable early medieval design by their firm is Saint Paul's Episcopal Church, Stockbridge, Massachusetts, 1883-84. Judson Memorial Church on Washington Square in New York (1888-93) is a masterful example of the American Renaissance. </text>
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                <text>John Ames Mitchell was educated at Harvard University, and studied architecture at the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris. He was a nephew of Oliver Ames Jr., and in 1875 designed Unity Church in North Easton, MA. This town is known for its many buildings by H.H. Richardson, including the Ames Free Library, the town hall, and the railroad station, which were donated by the Ames family. Henry Vaughn remodeled Unity Church in 1895.</text>
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