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For the Episcopal bishop see
William B. W. Howe, father of this architect
William Bell White Howe, Jr. (1851 – 1912), who used his first three initials and last name, was an architect in
Charleston, South Carolina. He was chief engineer for branches of the
Charleston & Savannah Railway and the
Savannah, Florida and Western Railway.
[1] A residence and a residential complex he designed in Charleston are listed on the
National Register of Historic Places (NRHP). He was also involved in the design of the
Jacksonville Terminal Complex (Union Station).
He was the son of the Episcopal bishop
William B. W. Howe.
[2]
He co-patented an automatic air brake design in 1885.
[3]
The home he built for himself was in
Flat Rock, Henderson County, North Carolina, and is now part of the
Flat Rock Historic District. He lived in Flat Rock when he expressed interest in work on Jacksonville, Florida's Union Station.
[4]
Works
-
Charles Drayton House (1886) NRHP listed
- Poppenheim Hardware Store (1891)
-
William Enston Home, a complex of teo-story brick cottages at 900 King Street, NRHP listed
-
Union Station (1919),
Beaux-arts,
Kenneth M. Murchison and W.B.W. Howe NRHP listed as
Jacksonville Terminal Complex, 1000 W. Bay St.
Jacksonville, FL
- St. Philips, local superintending architect
[2]
- St. Jude's Church, Walterboro, consecrated by his father
[5]
-
Sagilla River railroad bridge
[6]
- St. Michael's Episcopal Church restoration, one of the architects
[7]
References
-
^
"Poor's Directory of Railway Officials". Poor's Railroad Manual. June 11, 1887 – via Google Books.
- ^
a
b Anderson, Dorothy Middleton; Eastman, Margaret Middleton Rivers (May 4, 2015).
St. Philip's Church of Charleston: An Early History of the Oldest Parish in South Carolina. Arcadia Publishing.
ISBN
9781625854070 – via Google Books.
-
^ Office, United States Patent (June 11, 1886).
"Annual Report of the Commissioner of Patents". U.S. Government Printing Office – via Google Books.
-
^
"Engineering News and American Railway Journal". Engineering News Publishing Company. June 11, 1896 – via Google Books.
-
^
"Journal of the ... Annual Council of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the Diocese of South Carolina Held in ..." R.L. Bryan Company. June 11, 1880 – via Google Books.
-
^
"Engineering News-record". McGraw-Hill Publishing Company. June 11, 1900 – via Google Books.
-
^ Tomlan, Michael A. (November 21, 2014).
Historic Preservation: Caring for Our Expanding Legacy. Springer.
ISBN
9783319049755 – via Google Books.