Talk:Richard K. A. Kletting
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[edit]Try Find sources: Google (books · news · scholar · free images · WP refs) · FENS · JSTOR · TWL. --doncram 19:32, 4 June 2011 (UTC)
Incomplete and in-progress material moved from article to talk page
[edit]- in progress, not posted into date order yet
- Deseret News Building[1][2][3] Perhaps the new building on Richard's Street, into which the News moved in 1926? (mentioned in Deseret News article)
- Board of Trade Building[disambiguation needed][1]
- Brigham Young Trust Company Buildings[1] "the Brigham Young Trust Company buildings[3]: 57 probably on Commercial Street.
- Hooper Block[1] McCormick says Hooper Block was designed by Kletting on page 57 but by William H. Folsom on page 126.[3]: 57, 126 Per the Utah Center for Architecture, the Hooper Block was at 21-25 East 100 South, was an office building with ground-floor retail, was demolished in the 1950s, and its architects were Anton Reif and Richard Karl August Kletting.[4] According to Pacific Coast Architecture Database, Anton Reif was an architect in practice in Los Angeles in 1912, and died in 1926.[5] Anton Reif was German-trained, and partnered with San Diego-based John B. Stannard (1852-1942) in 1896 design of the Albert Morse Block.[6]
- old University of Utah ("now" West High School)[2] "vacated Deseret University, now West High School, on Third West Street."[3]: 112
- Bell Telephone Building[disambiguation needed][2]
- Jefferson school[2]
- Whittier school[2]
Houses, per Gibbs nrhp doc:
- Issac Ambrose Clayton House (1905) 254 7th Avenue, Salt Lake City, NRHP-listed in 1980 per Gibbs-nrhp-doc in Avenues Historic District, Utah form p. 287
- John Aldridge Evans House (1889), 174 B Street, Salt Lake City, NRHP-listed in 1980 per Gibbs-nrhp-doc. Seems to be 174 B Street item, p. 348 in Avenues Historic District. Is this not same as 140 (100) 2nd Avenue and carriage house, the Nephi W. Clayton House?
- William Dinwoodey House (1895), 153 C Street, Salt Lake City, NRHP-listed in 1980 per Gibbs-nrhp-doc, 153 C Street, p. 371 in Avenues Historic District
- George H. Dern House (1902), 36 H Street, Salt Lake City, NRHP-listed in 1980 per Gibbs, as part of Avenues Historic District. Utah form available in Avenues doc, p. 429
William F. Beer House (1899), 181 B Street, Salt Lake City, NRHP-listed in 1980 per Gibbs-nrhp-doccovered as William F. Beer Estate- Enos Wall Mansion (1905), 411 East 100 South, SLC, National Register 1982 (as part of South Temple Historic District
Henry Dinwoodey House (1890), 411 East 100 South, SLC, National Register 1974separately NRHP-listed, covered above- Albert Fisher Mansion (1893), 1206 West 200 South, SLC, Nominated to National Register. Was listed.
- Peter W. Madsen House (1890), 615 East 100 South, SLC. Demolished
- William Jennings House, 147 East South Temple, SLC. Demolished 1930
- Richard Kletting House, 280 A Street, SLC. Demolished
- Parley Williams House, 79 E Street, SLC. Altered
- R. Spencer Hines House (1895), 125 South 400 West, Provo, Utah, National Register 1978 (designed by Kletting or Richard Watkins)
- Reed Smoot House (1892), 183 East 100 South, Provo, National Historic Landmark 1975 (designed by Kletting or Richard Watkins)
- Ira Hatch House, NE corner 300 East & Center, Panguitch, Utah - eligible for nomination (designed by Kletting or Richard Watkins), is included in Panguitch Historic District: "The most prominent residence in town is the Hatch House, built in 1896, and located on a full acre at 329 E. Center. The Hatch House is a 2V£-story brick central-block-with-projecting-wings house type with a mix of Victorian Eclectic and Queen Anne elements such as the square tower [Photograph 24]." "The 1896 Hatch House at 329 E. Center Street was the highest valued ($6,000) residence on the 1930 census." "Photo No. 24: 6. Hatch, Ira & Mary, House, 329 E. Center Street (built 1896)". See also NRHP doc for Escalante, which covers all of Panguitch, too. N 300 East intersects Center. House on NE corner, at 37°49′24″N 112°25′45″W / 37.823279°N 112.429197°W is the Hatch House.
"Kletting was initially a classicist but had a progressive mind and was capable of keeping abreast of the most current architectural trends of his time. His varied works show influences of Richardsonian Romanesque, some excellent examples of Sullivanesque, as well as his better known Beaux-Arts Classicism masterpieces."(from McIntyre building Utah State Historical Society form)[7]
References
- ^ a b c d The McIntyre Building's Utah State form, included in big collection of docs
- ^ a b c d e Cite error: The named reference
UtahCommercial
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ a b c d Cite error: The named reference
mccormick
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ [1]
- ^ [2]
- ^ [3] and also in Google books as [4]
- ^ "Utah State Historical Society Structure/Site Information: McIntyre Building; ZCMI Cast Iron Front; McCornick Building, Crandall Building; Daft Block, Daynes Jewelry Building; Tracy Loan and Trust Company Building; First National Bank; Herald Building; Utah Savings and Trust Co. Building; Karrick Block; Lollin Block; Keith O'Brien Building; Oregon Shortline Railroad Company Bldg./Salt Lake High School Armory Bldg./Western Newspaper Union Bldg. INCOMPLETE". National Park Service. Retrieved May 22, 2019. With accompanying pictures
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