E.C. Jones
Edward Culliatt Jones (1822–1902), known as E.C. Jones, was an American architect who worked in Memphis, Tennessee with M.H. Baldwin in the firm Jones & Baldwin (1873–1880)[1] and in Charleston, South Carolina as Jones & Lee with Francis D. Lee (1826–1885).[2][3][4] Nicholas J. Clayton worked at Baldwin & Jones.
Jones was born in Charleston, South Carolina.[5]
Works
- Woodruff-Fontaine House (1870–1871) with M.H. Baldwin, Adams Avenue, Memphis. Built by Amos Woodruff.[4]
- James Lee House (expansion) with M.H. Baldwin, Adams Avenue (next door to Woodruff's house), Memphis for Charles Wesley Goyer, a sugar and molasses importer[6]
- Beale Street Baptist Church (1867–1881) with M.H. Baldwin, 379 Beale Street, Memphis. Built for a freed black congregation.[4][6]
- Church of the Holy Trinity (Episcopal), 900 South Street, Vicksburg, Mississippi
- Three story building at Porter Leath Children's Center c. 1875
- First Presbyterian Church (Memphis) (1884) at Poplar and Third, Memphis[7]
- Central Baptist Church (1890), demolished early 20th Century.[8]
- D.T. Porter Building (1895) The first steel frame skyscraper in Memphis. It had a circulating hot water heating system. Renovated in 1983 it has been converted to condominuims. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1995.[7]
References
- ↑
- ↑ Walter B. Edgar The South Carolina encyclopedia University of South Carolina Press, 2006 1077 pages
- ↑ Clayton's Galveston: The Architecture of Nicholas J. Clayton and His Contemporaries (Sara and John Lindsey Series in the Arts and Humanities) by Alice (Barrie) M. Scardino and Drexel Turner (Aug 1, 2000)
- 1 2 3 Carroll Van West [Tennessee's Historic Landscapes: A Traveler's Guide] pages 120, 121 124 Univ. of Tennessee Press, Jun 30, 1995 (503 pages)
- ↑ The West Tennessee Historical Society papers, Volume 29 West Tennessee Historical Society West Tennessee Historical Society., 1975 - Electronic journals
- 1 2 William Patton A Guide to Historic Downtown Memphis
- 1 2 Robert W. Dye Memphis Pages 40, 65 2005 96 pages
- ↑ Memphis By Robert W. Dye page 66
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