===In
New York City=== • James V. S. Woolley houses, 115-121 E 91st St,
Manhattan (1876–77) • Lucien C. Warner house, 2042 5th Ave,
Manhattan (1883, demolished) • Charles L. Guillaume houses, 133-145 W 87th St,
Manhattan (1884) • Stephen F. Sherman house, 410 Riverside Dr,
Manhattan (1884, demolished 1906) - Better known as the residence of George Noakes. • Joseph J. Kittell house, 495 Riverside Dr,
Manhattan (1885, demolished) • David S. Brown houses, 170-176 W 72nd St,
Manhattan (1886) - Built by Brown and various family members. No. 174, the only survivor, was occupied by Albert S. Roe. No. 172 was occupied by Jacob A. Chamberlain. • E. August Neresheimer house, 176 Malcolm X Blvd,
Manhattan (1886, demolished 1901) • Christian Blinn house, 3 W 81st St,
Manhattan (1888, demolished) • George Daiker houses, 718-730 St Nicholas Ave,
Manhattan (1889–90) • J. C. Desuris house, 607 W 113th St,
Manhattan (1889, demolished 1910) •
Webb Institute, Fordham Hill Oval,
the Bronx (1890–93, demolished) • George E. Clay house, 21-49 45th Rd,
Queens (1891) • Bay Ridge Reformed Church, 8101 Ridge Blvd,
Brooklyn (1896–97) ===In the
New York metropolitan area=== • John P. Allen house, 66 New England Ave,
Summit, New Jersey (1881, demolished) • Joseph T. Low house, 76 Rumson Rd,
Rumson, New Jersey (1885, demolished) • First Congregational Church, 95 N Main St,
Winsted, Connecticut (1900–01) •
Norumbega Castle, 63 High St,
Camden, Maine (1886–87, NRHP 1974) •
Norumbega Carriage House, High St,
Camden, Maine (1886, NRHP 1982) • Denny Hotel, 3rd Ave and Virginia St,
Seattle (1888–93, demolished 1906) - Construction resumed and completed in 1903 as the Washington Hotel. Demolished when Denny Hill was leveled. • Burrage Library,
Olivet College,
Olivet, Michigan (1889–90) • First Baptist Church, 212 S Lincoln St,
Spokane, Washington (1890, demolished) •
Old Gym,
Washington & Jefferson College,
Washington, Pennsylvania (1892–93) •
St. Timothy's Protestant Episcopal Church, 226 SE 3rd St,
Massillon, Ohio (1892, NRHP 1979) • Cranston Street Baptist Church, 475 Cranston St,
Providence, Rhode Island (1893) • First Baptist Church, 202 Milton Ave,
Ballston Spa, New York (1896) • First Baptist Church, 229 N King St,
Hampton, Virginia (1909, burned 1914) • First Baptist Church, Westover and Moran Aves,
Norfolk, Virginia (1909–10, burned) • Rice Memorial Hall,
Oberlin College,
Oberlin, Ohio (1909–10, altered) • First M. E. Church, 17 E 6th St,
Dunkirk, New York (1916) ==References==