Recent Changes for "Scopes and Feustmann" - HSL Wikihttp://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_FeustmannRecent Changes of the page "Scopes and Feustmann" on HSL Wiki.en-us Scopes and Feustmannhttp://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann2012-04-01 13:18:39Mwanner <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Scopes and Feustmann<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 7: </td> <td> Line 7: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> ["Maurice Feustmann"] (1870-1943) also came to Saranac Lake for the tuberculosis cure in the late 1890s after a European education, although after two years, he continued his cure in the Southwest. In 1903, Scopes invited Feustmann to return to Saranac Lake to become his partner. The new firm of ["Scopes and Feustmann"] entered and won a competition to design a ["Reception Hospital"] for ["Mary Prescott"]. The ["Colonial Revival"]-style Reception Hospital, off of Franklin Avenue, began what would become a specialization in the design of sanatoria, including the Mary Lewis Reception Hospital in Loomis, New York; the Vermont State Sanatorium; the Laurentian Sanatorium at St. Agathe, Quebec; the William Wirt Winchester Memorial Hospital in New Haven, Connecticut; the Lake Edward Sanatorium; and the County of St. Louis Sanatorium at Duluth, Minnesota. Scopes had already been working in the Colonial Revival style when Feustmann joined him, and the latter may have introduced Italian Renaissance and Beaux-Arts influences from his European education. </td> <td> <span>+</span> ["Maurice Feustmann"] (1870-1943) also came to Saranac Lake for the tuberculosis cure in the late 1890s after a European education, although after two years, he continued his cure in the Southwest. In 1903, Scopes invited Feustmann to return to Saranac Lake to become his partner. The new firm of ["Scopes and Feustmann"] entered and won a competition to design a ["Reception Hospital"] for ["Mary Prescott"]. The ["Colonial Revival"]-style Reception Hospital, off of Franklin Avenue, began what would become a specialization in the design of sanatoria, including the Mary Lewis Reception Hospital in Loomis, New York; the Vermont State Sanatorium; the Laurentian Sanatorium at St. Agathe, Quebec; the William Wirt Winchester Memorial Hospital in New Haven, Connecticut; the Lake Edward Sanatorium; and the County of St. Louis Sanatorium at Duluth, Minnesota. Scopes had already been working in the Colonial Revival style when Feustmann joined him, and the latter may have introduced Italian Renaissance and <span>[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/</span>Beaux-Arts<span>_architecture Beaux-Arts]</span> influences from his European education. </td> </tr> </table> </div> Scopes and Feustmannhttp://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann2011-03-05 09:34:46Mwanner <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Scopes and Feustmann<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 23: </td> <td> Line 23: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>- [[Image(Kinghorn-Sageman House.jpg,350,thumbnail,"Kinghorn-Sageman House")]]</span> </td> <td> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 27: </td> <td> Line 26: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> </td> <td> <span>+ [[Image(Kinghorn-Sageman House.jpg,350,thumbnail,"Kinghorn-Sageman House")]]</span> </td> </tr> </table> </div> Scopes and Feustmannhttp://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann2009-10-28 20:40:52Mwanner <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Scopes and Feustmann<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 7: </td> <td> Line 7: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> ["Maurice Feustmann"] (1870-1943) also came to Saranac Lake for the tuberculosis cure in the late 1890s after a European education, although after two years, he continued his cure in the Southwest. In 1903, Scopes invited Feustmann to return to Saranac Lake to become his partner. The new firm of ["Scopes and Feustmann"] entered and won a competition to design a ["Reception Hospital"] for ["Mary Prescott"]. The [<span>wiki:wikipedia:</span>"Colonial Revival"]-style Reception Hospital, off of Franklin Avenue, began what would become a specialization in the design of sanatoria, including the Mary Lewis Reception Hospital in Loomis, New York; the Vermont State Sanatorium; the Laurentian Sanatorium at St. Agathe, Quebec; the William Wirt Winchester Memorial Hospital in New Haven, Connecticut; the Lake Edward Sanatorium; and the County of St. Louis Sanatorium at Duluth, Minnesota. Scopes had already been working in the Colonial Revival style when Feustmann joined him, and the latter may have introduced Italian Renaissance and Beaux-Arts influences from his European education. </td> <td> <span>+</span> ["Maurice Feustmann"] (1870-1943) also came to Saranac Lake for the tuberculosis cure in the late 1890s after a European education, although after two years, he continued his cure in the Southwest. In 1903, Scopes invited Feustmann to return to Saranac Lake to become his partner. The new firm of ["Scopes and Feustmann"] entered and won a competition to design a ["Reception Hospital"] for ["Mary Prescott"]. The ["Colonial Revival"]-style Reception Hospital, off of Franklin Avenue, began what would become a specialization in the design of sanatoria, including the Mary Lewis Reception Hospital in Loomis, New York; the Vermont State Sanatorium; the Laurentian Sanatorium at St. Agathe, Quebec; the William Wirt Winchester Memorial Hospital in New Haven, Connecticut; the Lake Edward Sanatorium; and the County of St. Louis Sanatorium at Duluth, Minnesota. Scopes had already been working in the Colonial Revival style when Feustmann joined him, and the latter may have introduced Italian Renaissance and Beaux-Arts influences from his European education. </td> </tr> </table> </div> Scopes and Feustmannhttp://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann2008-12-22 20:35:36Mwanner <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Scopes and Feustmann<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 22: </td> <td> Line 22: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> </td> <td> <span>+ == ==<br> + [[Image(Kinghorn-Sageman House.jpg,350,thumbnail,"Kinghorn-Sageman House")]]<br> + [[Image(Lorna Valentine Mallinson Memorial.jpg,350,thumbnail,"Lorna Valentine Mallinson Memorial")]]<br> + [[Image(Dr. A. H. Allen Cottage.jpg,350,thumbnail,"Dr. A. H. Allen Cottage")]]<br> + [[Image(E. L. Gray House.jpg,350,thumbnail,"E. L. Gray House")]]<br> + [[Image(Morgan Cottage.jpg,350,thumbnail,"Morgan Cottage")]]</span> </td> </tr> </table> </div> Scopes and Feustmannhttp://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann2008-12-22 20:31:57MwannerUpload of image <a href="http://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann?action=Files&do=view&target=Morgan%20Cottage.jpg">Morgan Cottage.jpg</a>.Scopes and Feustmannhttp://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann2008-12-22 20:29:27MwannerUpload of image <a href="http://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann?action=Files&do=view&target=E.%20L.%20Gray%20House.jpg">E. L. Gray House.jpg</a>.Scopes and Feustmannhttp://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann2008-12-22 20:27:57MwannerUpload of image <a href="http://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann?action=Files&do=view&target=Dr.%20A.%20H.%20Allen%20Cottage.jpg">Dr. A. H. Allen Cottage.jpg</a>.Scopes and Feustmannhttp://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann2008-12-22 20:23:53MwannerUpload of image <a href="http://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann?action=Files&do=view&target=Lorna%20Valentine%20Mallinson%20Memorial.jpg">Lorna Valentine Mallinson Memorial.jpg</a>.Scopes and Feustmannhttp://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann2008-12-22 20:14:35MwannerUpload of image <a href="http://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann?action=Files&do=view&target=Kinghorn-Sageman%20House.jpg">Kinghorn-Sageman House.jpg</a>.Scopes and Feustmannhttp://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann2008-12-19 19:54:50Mwanner <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Scopes and Feustmann<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 9: </td> <td> Line 9: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> By 1910, the firm was also speculating in local real estate, building houses incorporating curing features at 84, 86, 90 and 96 Park Avenue (now 169, 177, and 185 Park, and 75 Catherine). Feustmann held 90 Park Avenue as a rental property until at least 1916. In 1922, Maurice Feustmann married Grace Brickner of New York City, and in 1923 built ["Feustmann Cottage" their home] at 28 (now 83) Catherine Street. The firm also designed several other area houses including the ["Dr. A. H. Allen Cottage"] (1909) at 22 Catherine Street (now 11 Woodycrest Road). They <span>also </span>produced designs for several camps, notably<span>&nbsp;the slab-sided main lodge at the Kildare Club, a private Adirondack camp rebuilt in 1906 from an earlier hunting and fishing club near Tupper Lake, completed in 1906, and the 1907, and</span> a Swiss<span>&nbsp;</span>style chalet built for Marcus M. Marks on Blue Mountain Lake in 1905<span>,</span> published in Henry H. Saylor's ''Bungalows'' <span>(</span>1911)<span>.</span> </td> <td> <span>+</span> By 1910, the firm was also speculating in local real estate, building houses incorporating curing features at 84, 86, 90 and 96 Park Avenue (now 169, 177, and 185 Park, and 75 Catherine). Feustmann held 90 Park Avenue as a rental property until at least 1916. In 1922, Maurice Feustmann married Grace Brickner of New York City, and in 1923 built ["Feustmann Cottage" their home] at 28 (now 83) Catherine Street. The firm also designed several other area houses including the ["Dr. A. H. Allen Cottage"] (1909) at 22 Catherine Street (now 11 Woodycrest Road). They produced designs for several camps, notably a Swiss<span>-</span>style chalet built for Marcus M. Marks on Blue Mountain Lake in 1905<span>&nbsp;(and</span> published in Henry H. Saylor's ''Bungalows'' <span>in </span>1911)<span>, and the slab-sided main lodge at the Kildare Club, a private Adirondack camp rebuilt in 1906 from an earlier hunting and fishing club near Tupper Lake.</span> </td> </tr> </table> </div> Scopes and Feustmannhttp://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann2008-12-19 19:38:56Mwanner <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Scopes and Feustmann<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 5: </td> <td> Line 5: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> ["William H. Scopes"] (1877-1964) came to Saranac Lake for treatment of his tuberculosis at the ["Adirondack Cottage Sanatorium"] in June, 1896. He became interested in architecture watching the construction of the<span>&nbsp;["William L. Coulter"]'s</span> Administration building at the San, an interest he pursued by taking a correspondence course in the subject. He began practicing while still a student, designing alterations to houses and, in 1903, the ["St. Armand Town Hall"] in Bloomingdale. </td> <td> <span>+</span> ["William H. Scopes"] (1877-1964) came to Saranac Lake for treatment of his tuberculosis at the ["Adirondack Cottage Sanatorium"] in June, 1896. He became interested in architecture watching <span>["William L. Coulter"] supervise </span>the construction of the Administration building at the San, an interest he pursued by taking a correspondence course in the subject. He began practicing while still a student, designing alterations to houses and, in 1903, the ["St. Armand Town Hall"] in Bloomingdale. </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 7: </td> <td> Line 7: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> ["Maurice Feustmann"] (1870-1943) also came to Saranac Lake for the tuberculosis cure in the late 1890s after a European education, although after two years, he continued his cure in the Southwest. In 1903<span>&nbsp;["William Henry Scopes"]</span> invited Feustmann to return to Saranac Lake to become his partner. The new firm of ["Scopes and Feustmann"] entered and won a competition to design a ["Reception Hospital"] for ["Mary Prescott"]. The [wiki:wikipedia:"Colonial Revival"]-style Reception Hospital, off of Franklin Avenue, began what would become a specialization in the design of sanatoria, including the Mary Lewis Reception Hospital in Loomis, New York; the Vermont State Sanatorium; the Laurentian Sanatorium at St. Agathe, Quebec; the William Wirt Winchester Memorial Hospital in New Haven, Connecticut; the Lake Edward Sanatorium; and the County of St. Louis Sanatorium at Duluth, Minnesota. Scopes had already been working in the Colonial Revival style when Feustmann joined him, and <span>Maurice Feustmann</span> may have introduced Italian Renaissance and Beaux-Arts influences from his European education. </td> <td> <span>+</span> ["Maurice Feustmann"] (1870-1943) also came to Saranac Lake for the tuberculosis cure in the late 1890s after a European education, although after two years, he continued his cure in the Southwest. In 1903<span>, Scopes</span> invited Feustmann to return to Saranac Lake to become his partner. The new firm of ["Scopes and Feustmann"] entered and won a competition to design a ["Reception Hospital"] for ["Mary Prescott"]. The [wiki:wikipedia:"Colonial Revival"]-style Reception Hospital, off of Franklin Avenue, began what would become a specialization in the design of sanatoria, including the Mary Lewis Reception Hospital in Loomis, New York; the Vermont State Sanatorium; the Laurentian Sanatorium at St. Agathe, Quebec; the William Wirt Winchester Memorial Hospital in New Haven, Connecticut; the Lake Edward Sanatorium; and the County of St. Louis Sanatorium at Duluth, Minnesota. Scopes had already been working in the Colonial Revival style when Feustmann joined him, and <span>the latter</span> may have introduced Italian Renaissance and Beaux-Arts influences from his European education. </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 9: </td> <td> Line 9: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> By 1910, the firm was also speculating in local real estate, building houses incorporating curing features at 84, 86, 90 and 96 Park Avenue (now 169, 177, and 185 Park, and 75 Catherine). Feustmann held 90 Park Avenue as a rental property until at least 1916. In 1922, Maurice Feustmann married Grace Brickner of New York City, and in 1923 built ["Feustmann Cottage" their home] at 28 (now 83) Catherine Street. The firm also designed several other area houses including the ["Dr. A. H. Allen Cottage"] (1909) at 22 Catherine Street. They also produced designs for several camps, notably the slab-sided main lodge at the Kildare Club, a private Adirondack camp rebuilt in 1906 from an earlier hunting and fishing club near Tupper Lake, completed in 1906, and the 1907, and a Swiss style chalet built for Marcus M. Marks on Blue Mountain Lake in 1905, published in Henry H. Saylor's ''Bungalows'' (1911). </td> <td> <span>+</span> By 1910, the firm was also speculating in local real estate, building houses incorporating curing features at 84, 86, 90 and 96 Park Avenue (now 169, 177, and 185 Park, and 75 Catherine). Feustmann held 90 Park Avenue as a rental property until at least 1916. In 1922, Maurice Feustmann married Grace Brickner of New York City, and in 1923 built ["Feustmann Cottage" their home] at 28 (now 83) Catherine Street. The firm also designed several other area houses including the ["Dr. A. H. Allen Cottage"] (1909) at 22 Catherine Street<span>&nbsp;(now 11 Woodycrest Road)</span>. They also produced designs for several camps, notably the slab-sided main lodge at the Kildare Club, a private Adirondack camp rebuilt in 1906 from an earlier hunting and fishing club near Tupper Lake, completed in 1906, and the 1907, and a Swiss style chalet built for Marcus M. Marks on Blue Mountain Lake in 1905, published in Henry H. Saylor's ''Bungalows'' (1911). </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 19: </td> <td> Line 19: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> Scopes and Feustmann did no work in Saranac Lake after 1930, when new construction <span>near</span>l<span>y ceased</span> entirely. The firm had offices at 175 5th Avenue in New York City. [[footnote(http://thehistorybox.com/ny_city/nycity_architects_P-Z_article00007.htm List of New York City's Architects-1930 P-Z)]] </td> <td> <span>+</span> Scopes and Feustmann did no work in Saranac Lake after 1930, when new construction <span>ceased a</span>l<span>most</span> entirely. The firm had offices at 175 5th Avenue in New York City. [[footnote(http://thehistorybox.com/ny_city/nycity_architects_P-Z_article00007.htm List of New York City's Architects-1930 P-Z)]] </td> </tr> </table> </div> Scopes and Feustmannhttp://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann2008-12-19 19:06:54Mwanner <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Scopes and Feustmann<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 5: </td> <td> Line 5: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> ["William H. Scopes"] (1877-1964) came to Saranac Lake for treatment of his tuberculosis at the ["Adirondack Cottage Sanatorium"] in June, 1896. He became interested in architecture watching the construction of the ["William L. Coulter"]'s Administration building at the San, an interest he pursued by taking a correspondence course in the subject. He began practicing while still a student, designing alterations to houses and, in 1903, the ["St. Armand Town Hall"] in Bloomingdale<span>&nbsp;.</span> </td> <td> <span>+</span> ["William H. Scopes"] (1877-1964) came to Saranac Lake for treatment of his tuberculosis at the ["Adirondack Cottage Sanatorium"] in June, 1896. He became interested in architecture watching the construction of the ["William L. Coulter"]'s Administration building at the San, an interest he pursued by taking a correspondence course in the subject. He began practicing while still a student, designing alterations to houses and, in 1903, the ["St. Armand Town Hall"] in Bloomingdale<span>.</span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 28: </td> <td> Line 28: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> - [http://www.nps.gov/history/nhl/themes/Architecture/2camp.pdf Haynes, Wesley, NRHP The Adirondack Camp in American Architecture] </td> <td> <span>+ * [http://www.aarch.org/archives/pastnews/Vol.7</span>-<span>1June98.pdf "Scopes and Feustmann, Saranac Lake Architects", Adirondack Architectural Heritage Newsletter]<br> + *</span> [http://www.nps.gov/history/nhl/themes/Architecture/2camp.pdf Haynes, Wesley, NRHP The Adirondack Camp in American Architecture] </td> </tr> </table> </div> Scopes and Feustmannhttp://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann2008-12-19 18:16:25Mwanner <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Scopes and Feustmann<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 11: </td> <td> Line 11: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> </td> <td> <span>+ [[Image(Will Rogers Memorial Hospital.jpg,400,thumbnail, "Will Rogers Memorial Hospital")]]<br> + </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 19: </td> <td> Line 21: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> Maurice Feustmann died of heart disease in 1943 at age 70. William Scopes died in 1964 at 87, and is buried in ["Pine Ridge Cemetery"]. He was honored in 1956 by the Central New York Chapter of the [wiki:wikipedia"American Institute of Architects"]. </td> <td> <span>+</span> Maurice Feustmann died of heart disease in 1943 at age 70. William Scopes died in 1964 at 87, and is buried in ["Pine Ridge Cemetery"]. He was honored in 1956 by the Central New York Chapter of the [wiki:wikipedia<span>:</span>"American Institute of Architects"]. </td> </tr> </table> </div> Scopes and Feustmannhttp://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann2008-12-19 18:16:09MwannerUpload of image <a href="http://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann?action=Files&do=view&target=Will%20Rogers%20Memorial%20Hospital.jpg">Will Rogers Memorial Hospital.jpg</a>.Scopes and Feustmannhttp://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann2008-12-19 18:13:33Mwanner <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Scopes and Feustmann<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 1: </td> <td> Line 1: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> </td> <td> <span>+ [[Image(Harrietstown Town Hall.jpg,350,thumbnail,right,"Harrietstown Town Hall")]]<br> + </span> </td> </tr> </table> </div> Scopes and Feustmannhttp://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann2008-12-19 18:13:24MwannerUpload of image <a href="http://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann?action=Files&do=view&target=Harrietstown%20Town%20Hall.jpg">Harrietstown Town Hall.jpg</a>.Scopes and Feustmannhttp://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann2008-12-19 18:11:14Mwanner <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Scopes and Feustmann<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 1: </td> <td> Line 1: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>- The Saranac Lake architectural firm of '''Scopes and Feustmann''' specialized in hospital and sanitarium design, and designed Adirondack great camps on the Saranac and St. Regis lakes and Blue Mountain Lake. ["William Scopes"] (1877-1964) and ["Maurice Feustmann"] (1870-1943) appear to have formed a partnership in 1903 and remained in practice through the late 1920s. Among their documented projects was a Swiss style chalet built for Marcus M. Marks on Blue Mountain Lake in 1905 which was subsequently published in Henry H. Saylor's ''Bungalows'' (1911), and a slab-sided main lodge at the Kildare Club, a private Adirondack camp rebuilt in 1906 from an earlier hunting and fishing club near Tupper Lake. They designed the ["Harrietstown Town Hall"] and the ["Hotel Saranac"], which is listed as an Historic Hotel of America by the [http://www.preservationnation.org/ National Trust for Historic Preservation], and a number of buildings at the ["Adirondack Cottage Sanitarium"].</span> </td> <td> <span>+ The Saranac Lake architectural firm of '''Scopes and Feustmann''' specialized in hospital and sanitarium design, and designed Adirondack great camps on the Saranac and St. Regis lakes and Blue Mountain Lake.</span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 3: </td> <td> Line 3: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>- The firm had offices at 175 5th Avenue in New York City. [[footnote(http://thehistorybox.com/ny_city/nycity_architects_P-Z_article00007.htm List of New York City's Architects-1930 P-Z)]]</span> </td> <td> <span>+ ["William H. Scopes"] (1877-1964) came to Saranac Lake for treatment of his tuberculosis at the ["Adirondack Cottage Sanatorium"] in June, 1896. He became interested in architecture watching the construction of the ["William L. Coulter"]'s Administration building at the San, an interest he pursued by taking a correspondence course in the subject. He began practicing while still a student, designing alterations to houses and, in 1903, the ["St. Armand Town Hall"] in Bloomingdale .<br> + <br> + ["Maurice Feustmann"] (1870-1943) also came to Saranac Lake for the tuberculosis cure in the late 1890s after a European education, although after two years, he continued his cure in the Southwest. In 1903 ["William Henry Scopes"] invited Feustmann to return to Saranac Lake to become his partner. The new firm of ["Scopes and Feustmann"] entered and won a competition to design a ["Reception Hospital"] for ["Mary Prescott"]. The [wiki:wikipedia:"Colonial Revival"]-style Reception Hospital, off of Franklin Avenue, began what would become a specialization in the design of sanatoria, including the Mary Lewis Reception Hospital in Loomis, New York; the Vermont State Sanatorium; the Laurentian Sanatorium at St. Agathe, Quebec; the William Wirt Winchester Memorial Hospital in New Haven, Connecticut; the Lake Edward Sanatorium; and the County of St. Louis Sanatorium at Duluth, Minnesota. Scopes had already been working in the Colonial Revival style when Feustmann joined him, and Maurice Feustmann may have introduced Italian Renaissance and Beaux-Arts influences from his European education.<br> + <br> + By 1910, the firm was also speculating in local real estate, building houses incorporating curing features at 84, 86, 90 and 96 Park Avenue (now 169, 177, and 185 Park, and 75 Catherine). Feustmann held 90 Park Avenue as a rental property until at least 1916. In 1922, Maurice Feustmann married Grace Brickner of New York City, and in 1923 built ["Feustmann Cottage" their home] at 28 (now 83) Catherine Street. The firm also designed several other area houses including the ["Dr. A. H. Allen Cottage"] (1909) at 22 Catherine Street. They also produced designs for several camps, notably the slab-sided main lodge at the Kildare Club, a private Adirondack camp rebuilt in 1906 from an earlier hunting and fishing club near Tupper Lake, completed in 1906, and the 1907, and a Swiss style chalet built for Marcus M. Marks on Blue Mountain Lake in 1905, published in Henry H. Saylor's ''Bungalows'' (1911).<br> + <br> + The firm designed nine extant buildings at ["Trudeau Sanatorium"], and many others that have been torn down, and the ["Will Rogers Memorial Hospital"]. In 1916 the firm built the ["Pontiac Theatre"]; it burned in the 1980s.<br> + <br> + The Santanoni Apartments, built c. 1913-14, were "an Exclusive &amp; Distinctive Apartment Hotel for the Health Seeker"; it was a personal investment for William Scopes. Located at 36 Church Street, it was designed as a six-story fireproof apartment house with suites and rooms accommodating 66 residents. It included an elevator and a formal dining room on the first floor. Despite the "fireproof" claim, the top two floors were severely damaged by fire in 1973.<br> + <br> + They designed the ["Harrietstown Town Hall"] and the ["Hotel Saranac"], which is listed as an Historic Hotel of America by the [http://www.preservationnation.org/ National Trust for Historic Preservation], and the ["Haase Block"] at 60 Main Street (site of the present Adirondack Bank), an [wiki:wikipedia:"Italian Renaissance Revival"] commercial building, that includes apartments on the second and third floors with open-air balconies.<br> + <br> + Scopes and Feustmann did no work in Saranac Lake after 1930, when new construction nearly ceased entirely. The firm had offices at 175 5th Avenue in New York City. [[footnote(http://thehistorybox.com/ny_city/nycity_architects_P-Z_article00007.htm List of New York City's Architects-1930 P-Z)]]<br> + <br> + Maurice Feustmann died of heart disease in 1943 at age 70. William Scopes died in 1964 at 87, and is buried in ["Pine Ridge Cemetery"]. He was honored in 1956 by the Central New York Chapter of the [wiki:wikipedia"American Institute of Architects"].</span> </td> </tr> </table> </div> Scopes and Feustmannhttp://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann2008-12-19 17:00:56Mwanner <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Scopes and Feustmann<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 1: </td> <td> Line 1: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> The Saranac Lake architectural firm of '''Scopes and Feustmann''' specialized in hospital and sanitarium design, and designed Adirondack great camps on the Saranac and St. Regis lakes and Blue Mountain Lake. ["William Scopes"] and ["Maurice Feustmann"] (1870-1943) appear to have formed a partnership in 1903 and remained in practice through the late 1920s. Among their documented projects was a Swiss style chalet built for Marcus M. Marks on Blue Mountain Lake in 1905 which was subsequently published in Henry H. Saylor's ''Bungalows'' (1911), and a slab-sided main lodge at the Kildare Club, a private Adirondack camp rebuilt in 1906 from an earlier hunting and fishing club near Tupper Lake. They designed the ["Harrietstown Town Hall"] and the ["Hotel Saranac"], which is listed as an Historic Hotel of America by the [http://www.preservationnation.org/ National Trust for Historic Preservation], and a number of buildings at the ["Adirondack Cottage Sanitarium"]. </td> <td> <span>+</span> The Saranac Lake architectural firm of '''Scopes and Feustmann''' specialized in hospital and sanitarium design, and designed Adirondack great camps on the Saranac and St. Regis lakes and Blue Mountain Lake. ["William Scopes"]<span>&nbsp;(1877-1964)</span> and ["Maurice Feustmann"] (1870-1943) appear to have formed a partnership in 1903 and remained in practice through the late 1920s. Among their documented projects was a Swiss style chalet built for Marcus M. Marks on Blue Mountain Lake in 1905 which was subsequently published in Henry H. Saylor's ''Bungalows'' (1911), and a slab-sided main lodge at the Kildare Club, a private Adirondack camp rebuilt in 1906 from an earlier hunting and fishing club near Tupper Lake. They designed the ["Harrietstown Town Hall"] and the ["Hotel Saranac"], which is listed as an Historic Hotel of America by the [http://www.preservationnation.org/ National Trust for Historic Preservation], and a number of buildings at the ["Adirondack Cottage Sanitarium"]. </td> </tr> </table> </div> Scopes and Feustmannhttp://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann2008-12-16 13:53:38MwannerNYC offices <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Scopes and Feustmann<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 2: </td> <td> Line 2: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> </td> <td> <span>+ <br> + The firm had offices at 175 5th Avenue in New York City. [[footnote(http://thehistorybox.com/ny_city/nycity_architects_P-Z_article00007.htm List of New York City's Architects-1930 P-Z)]]</span> </td> </tr> </table> </div> Scopes and Feustmannhttp://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann2008-12-16 13:49:20Mwanneroops <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Scopes and Feustmann<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 1: </td> <td> Line 1: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> The Saranac Lake architectural firm of '''Scopes and Feustmann''' specialized in hospital and sanitarium design, and designed Adirondack great camps on the Saranac and St. Regis lakes and Blue Mountain Lake. ["William Scopes"] and ["Maurice Feustmann"] (1870-1943) appear to have formed a partnership in 1903 and remained in practice through the late 1920s. Among their documented projects was a Swiss style chalet built for Marcus M. Marks on Blue Mountain Lake in 1905 which was subsequently published in Henry H. Saylor's ''Bungalows'' (1911), and a slab-sided main lodge at the Kildare Club, a private Adirondack camp rebuilt in 1906 from an earlier hunting and fishing club near Tupper Lake. They designed the ["Harrietstown Town Hall]<span>"</span> and the ["Hotel Saranac"], which is listed as an Historic Hotel of America by the [http://www.preservationnation.org/ National Trust for Historic Preservation], and a number of buildings at the ["Adirondack Cottage Sanitarium"]. </td> <td> <span>+</span> The Saranac Lake architectural firm of '''Scopes and Feustmann''' specialized in hospital and sanitarium design, and designed Adirondack great camps on the Saranac and St. Regis lakes and Blue Mountain Lake. ["William Scopes"] and ["Maurice Feustmann"] (1870-1943) appear to have formed a partnership in 1903 and remained in practice through the late 1920s. Among their documented projects was a Swiss style chalet built for Marcus M. Marks on Blue Mountain Lake in 1905 which was subsequently published in Henry H. Saylor's ''Bungalows'' (1911), and a slab-sided main lodge at the Kildare Club, a private Adirondack camp rebuilt in 1906 from an earlier hunting and fishing club near Tupper Lake. They designed the ["Harrietstown Town Hall<span>"</span>] and the ["Hotel Saranac"], which is listed as an Historic Hotel of America by the [http://www.preservationnation.org/ National Trust for Historic Preservation], and a number of buildings at the ["Adirondack Cottage Sanitarium"]. </td> </tr> </table> </div> Scopes and Feustmannhttp://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann2008-12-16 13:44:07Mwannersp <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Scopes and Feustmann<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 1: </td> <td> Line 1: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> The Saranac Lake architectural firm of '''Scopes and Feustmann''' specialized in hospital and sanitarium design, and designed Adirondack great camps on the Saranac and St. Regis lakes and Blue Mountain Lake. ["William Scopes"] and ["Maurice Feustmann"] (1870-1943) appear to have formed a partnership in 1903 and remained in practice through the late 1920s. Among their documented projects was a Swiss style chalet built for Marcus M. Marks on Blue Mountain Lake in 1905 which was subsequently published in Henry H. Saylor's ''Bungalows'' (1911), and a slab-sided main lodge at the Kildare Club, a private Adirondack camp rebuilt in 1906 from an earlier hunting and fishing club near Tupper Lake. They designed the ["Harrietstown Town Hall]" and the ["Hotel Saranac"], which is listed as an Historic Hotel of America by the [http://www.preservationnation.org/ National Trust for Historic Preservation], and a number of buildings at the ["Adirondack Cottage San<span>1</span>tarium"]. </td> <td> <span>+</span> The Saranac Lake architectural firm of '''Scopes and Feustmann''' specialized in hospital and sanitarium design, and designed Adirondack great camps on the Saranac and St. Regis lakes and Blue Mountain Lake. ["William Scopes"] and ["Maurice Feustmann"] (1870-1943) appear to have formed a partnership in 1903 and remained in practice through the late 1920s. Among their documented projects was a Swiss style chalet built for Marcus M. Marks on Blue Mountain Lake in 1905 which was subsequently published in Henry H. Saylor's ''Bungalows'' (1911), and a slab-sided main lodge at the Kildare Club, a private Adirondack camp rebuilt in 1906 from an earlier hunting and fishing club near Tupper Lake. They designed the ["Harrietstown Town Hall]" and the ["Hotel Saranac"], which is listed as an Historic Hotel of America by the [http://www.preservationnation.org/ National Trust for Historic Preservation], and a number of buildings at the ["Adirondack Cottage San<span>i</span>tarium"]. </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 5: </td> <td> Line 5: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> ["Trudeau Sanatorium Historic District<span>.</span>"] </td> <td> <span>+</span> ["Trudeau Sanatorium Historic District"] </td> </tr> </table> </div> Scopes and Feustmannhttp://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann2008-12-16 13:42:09Mwanner <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Scopes and Feustmann<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 1: </td> <td> Line 1: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> The Saranac Lake architectural firm of '''Scopes and Feustmann''' specialized in hospital and sanitarium design, and designed Adirondack great camps on the Saranac and St. Regis lakes and Blue Mountain Lake. ["William Scopes"] and ["Maurice Feustmann"] (1870-1943) appear to have formed a partnership in 1903 and remained in practice through the late 1920s. Among their documented projects was a Swiss style chalet built for Marcus M. Marks on Blue Mountain Lake in 1905 which was subsequently published in Henry H. Saylor's ''Bungalows'' (1911), and a slab-sided main lodge at the Kildare Club, a private Adirondack camp rebuilt in 1906 from an earlier hunting and fishing club near Tupper Lake. They designed the ["Harrietstown Town Hall]" and the ["Hotel Saranac"], which is listed as an Historic Hotel of America by the [http://www.preservationnation.org/ National Trust for Historic Preservation], and a number of buildings at the ["Adirondack Cottage San<span>ato</span>rium"]. </td> <td> <span>+</span> The Saranac Lake architectural firm of '''Scopes and Feustmann''' specialized in hospital and sanitarium design, and designed Adirondack great camps on the Saranac and St. Regis lakes and Blue Mountain Lake. ["William Scopes"] and ["Maurice Feustmann"] (1870-1943) appear to have formed a partnership in 1903 and remained in practice through the late 1920s. Among their documented projects was a Swiss style chalet built for Marcus M. Marks on Blue Mountain Lake in 1905 which was subsequently published in Henry H. Saylor's ''Bungalows'' (1911), and a slab-sided main lodge at the Kildare Club, a private Adirondack camp rebuilt in 1906 from an earlier hunting and fishing club near Tupper Lake. They designed the ["Harrietstown Town Hall]" and the ["Hotel Saranac"], which is listed as an Historic Hotel of America by the [http://www.preservationnation.org/ National Trust for Historic Preservation], and a number of buildings at the ["Adirondack Cottage San<span>1ta</span>rium"]. </td> </tr> </table> </div> Scopes and Feustmannhttp://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann2008-12-16 13:40:15Mwannermore <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Scopes and Feustmann<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 1: </td> <td> Line 1: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> The Saranac Lake architectural firm of '''Scopes and Feustmann''' specialized in hospital and sanitarium design, and designed Adirondack great camps on the Saranac and St. Regis lakes and Blue Mountain Lake. ["William Scopes"] and ["Maurice Feustmann"] (1870-1943) appear to have formed a partnership in 1903 and remained in practice through the late 1920s. Among their documented projects was a Swiss style chalet built for Marcus M. Marks on Blue Mountain Lake in 1905 which was subsequently published in Henry H. Saylor's ''Bungalows'' (1911), and a slab-sided main lodge at the Kildare Club, a private Adirondack camp rebuilt in 1906 from an earlier hunting and fishing club near Tupper Lake. </td> <td> <span>+</span> The Saranac Lake architectural firm of '''Scopes and Feustmann''' specialized in hospital and sanitarium design, and designed Adirondack great camps on the Saranac and St. Regis lakes and Blue Mountain Lake. ["William Scopes"] and ["Maurice Feustmann"] (1870-1943) appear to have formed a partnership in 1903 and remained in practice through the late 1920s. Among their documented projects was a Swiss style chalet built for Marcus M. Marks on Blue Mountain Lake in 1905 which was subsequently published in Henry H. Saylor's ''Bungalows'' (1911), and a slab-sided main lodge at the Kildare Club, a private Adirondack camp rebuilt in 1906 from an earlier hunting and fishing club near Tupper Lake.<span>&nbsp;They designed the ["Harrietstown Town Hall]" and the ["Hotel Saranac"], which is listed as an Historic Hotel of America by the [http://www.preservationnation.org/ National Trust for Historic Preservation], and a number of buildings at the ["Adirondack Cottage Sanatorium"].</span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 3: </td> <td> Line 3: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> </td> <td> <span>+ ==See also==<br> + <br> + ["Trudeau Sanatorium Historic District."]<br> + <br> + ==Sources==</span> </td> </tr> </table> </div> Scopes and Feustmannhttp://hsl.wikispot.org/Scopes_and_Feustmann2008-12-16 13:28:34Mwanner <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Scopes and Feustmann<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 1: </td> <td> Line 1: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> </td> <td> <span>+ The Saranac Lake architectural firm of '''Scopes and Feustmann''' specialized in hospital and sanitarium design, and designed Adirondack great camps on the Saranac and St. Regis lakes and Blue Mountain Lake. ["William Scopes"] and ["Maurice Feustmann"] (1870-1943) appear to have formed a partnership in 1903 and remained in practice through the late 1920s. Among their documented projects was a Swiss style chalet built for Marcus M. Marks on Blue Mountain Lake in 1905 which was subsequently published in Henry H. Saylor's ''Bungalows'' (1911), and a slab-sided main lodge at the Kildare Club, a private Adirondack camp rebuilt in 1906 from an earlier hunting and fishing club near Tupper Lake.<br> + <br> + [http://www.nps.gov/history/nhl/themes/Architecture/2camp.pdf Haynes, Wesley, NRHP The Adirondack Camp in American Architecture]</span> </td> </tr> </table> </div>