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Charles Sumner Sedgwick

American architect (1856–1922) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Charles Sumner Sedgwick
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Charles Sumner Sedgwick[note 1] (1856 – March 12, 1922)[1] was an American architect.[2]

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First National Bank in St. Cloud, Minnesota

Personal life

Sedgwick was born in 1856, in New York.[3] His wife, Mary D., was born in the 1850s and died in 1920.[4] He died on March 12, 1922, aged 65 or 66, at St. Barnabas Hospital in Minnesota, from Bright's disease.[5]

Career

He started his career as an architect in Binghamton, New York and moved to Minneapolis in 1884[6] and completed several projects in the city[7][citation needed] and surrounding areas and states. Several of his works are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[8] Sedgwick is a designated Minneapolis master architect by the city's heritage preservation authority.

Works

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Sedgwick was most known for his residential commissions, but also designed churches, school buildings, and commercial structures.[3]

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Burton Hall at the University of Minnesota
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Old Waconia City Hall
  • Budge Hall (1899 – demolished 1981) and Science Hall (renamed Minard Hall in honor of Dean A. E. Minard) at North Dakota State University[12] Minard Hall has been added on to and extensively renovated over the years.[13]
  • William F. Bruell House (1902), Address Restricted, Redfield, South Dakota (Sedgwick & Saxton), NRHP-listed[8][14]
  • Four story commercial building at 256 1st Avenue North (1902) in Minneapolis
  • Morris Carnegie Library (1905), Nevada and 6th Sts., Morris, MN (Sedgwick & Saxton), NRHP-listed[8]
  • Old Waconia City Hall (1909), 9 W. 1st St. in Waconia, Minnesota, NRHP-listed[8][15]
  • First Lutheran Church (1916) 434 First Street Southwest in Blooming Prairie, Minnesota[16]
  • Park Avenue Covenant Church, Minneapolis
  • Park Avenue Congregational Church, at Park and Franklin Avenues, Minneapolis[3]
  • Lowry Hill Congregational Church, at Dupont and Franklin Avenue, Minneapolis[3]
  • Fourth Baptist Church, at 2105 Fremont Avenue North, Minneapolis[3]
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Notes

  1. In some sources, his name has been incorrectly presented as Charles Sedgewick

References

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