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American architect (1878 - 1940)
Albert Anthony Ten Eyck Brown (1878–1940) was an architect active in
Atlanta, Georgia and other areas.
[1] Brown was born in
Albany, New York. He studied at the
New York Academy of Design.
[1]
Several of his works are listed on the U.S.
National Register of Historic Places.
[2]
Buildings
Buildings designed by Ten Eyck Brown include:
Miami, Florida
Atlanta, Georgia
(in
Downtown Atlanta unless otherwise specified)
- Arlington Hall (1918–19) at
Lanier University,
Morningside-Lenox Park neighborhood
- Bass Furniture Building (1898), 142–150 Mitchell St., NRHP-listed
-
Clark Howell Homes (1939–41)
-
Fulton County Courthouse (1911–1914), 160 Pryor St., SW, NRHP-listed
-
Peachtree Arcade (1917–1918), 2 Peachtree St., demolished
- St. Anthony of Padua Catholic Church (1908–1923) in the
West End neighborhood
-
Spotswood Hall
Archived February 2, 2013, at the
Wayback Machine (1913, remodeled 1933), residence, 555 Argonne Dr., NW,
Buckhead, NRHP-listed
-
State Bar of Georgia Building (1918, renovated 1920–1922?), formerly the
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta
-
Sweet Auburn Curb Market (1923)
- Thornton Building (1932), 10 Pryor St. (10 Park Place South), NRHP-listed
- United States Post Office, Federal Annex (1931–33), now the
Martin Luther King Jr. Federal Building, 77 Forsyth St., NRHP-listed
Atlanta neighborhoods
One or more works in the following
Atlanta neighborhoods:
Outside Atlanta
Tennessee
References
Further reading
- Robert M. Craig, Atlanta Architecture: Art Deco to Modern Classic, 1929–1959 (Gretna, La.: Pelican, 1995)
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