Cummings_and_Sears

Cummings and Sears

Cummings and Sears

American architecture firm


Cummings and Sears (est. 1864) was an architecture firm in 19th-century Boston, Massachusetts, established by Charles Amos Cummings and Willard T. Sears.[1]

Quick Facts Practice information, Founders ...
The Old South Church in Boston, Massachusetts, completed in 1875.

History and legacy

In the 1860s they kept an office in the Studio Building on Tremont Street,[2] moving in the 1870s to Pemberton Square.[3][4]

Although most of their works are concentrated in New England, they also were commissioned to design buildings as far west as Utah as well as on Campobello Island in New Brunswick, Canada. Their best known work is Old South Church in Boston, completed in 1875.

Architects who worked in the office of Cummings & Sears include Charles L. Bevins of Rhode Island and Warren R. Briggs and Edward A. Cudworth of Connecticut.

Several of their buildings have been listed on the United States National Register of Historic Places, and others contribute to listed historic districts.

Architectural works

See also

Notes

  1. A contributing property to the Dublin Village Historic District, NRHP-listed in 1983.
  2. A contributing property to the Farmington Historic District, NRHP-listed in 1995.

References

  1. Who's who in New England, Volume 3. 1915
  2. Boston commercial directory for 1869
  3. Roger G. Reed, "The Lost Victorian Campus" in Academy Hill: The Andover Campus, 1778 to the Present (New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2000)
  4. Edwin M. Bacon, King's Dictionary of Boston (Cambridge: Moses King, 1883): 27.
  5. Robert D. Andrews, "Conditions of Architectural Practice Thirty Years and More Ago" in Architectural Review 5, no. 11 (November 1917): 237-238.
  6. "The Illustrations" in American Architect and Building News 2, no. 70 (April 28, 1877): 133.
  7. Keith N. Morgan, Buildings of Massachusetts: Metropolitan Boston (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2009)
  8. "The Illustrations" in American Architect and Building News 1 (February 26, 1876): 68.
  9. Architectural Sketch-book 2, no. 1 (July 1874)
  10. "Yachting and Boating" in Forest and Stream 2, no. 8 (April 2 1874): 125.
  11. Leonard Bolles Ellis, History of New Bedford and its Vicinity, 1602-1892 (Syracuse: D. Mason & Company, 1892)
  12. Kate Gannett Wells, Campobello: An Historical Sketch (1893)
  13. "GLO.1163." mhc-macris.net. Massachusetts Historical Commission, n. d. Accessed January 13, 2022.
  14. William Morgan, Monadnock Summer: The Architectural Legacy of Dublin, New Hampshire (Boston: David R. Godine, 2011)
  15. "GLO.1164." mhc-macris.net. Massachusetts Historical Commission, n. d. Accessed January 13, 2022.
  16. Seventh Annual Report of the New West Education Commission (Chicago: New West Education Commission, 1887)

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