, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania (1887) Law School (now Silverman Hall), Philadelphia (1898–1901) , Princeton, New Jersey (1896) , Missouri (1909)
Bryn Mawr College • Radnor Hall, Bryn Mawr College (1887) • Denbigh Hall, Bryn Mawr College (1890–91) • Dalton Hall, Bryn Mawr College (1893) • Pembroke Hall, Bryn Mawr College (1892–94) • The
Deanery, Bryn Mawr College (1894–96) • Rockefeller Hall, Bryn Mawr College (1901–04) •
Old Library, Bryn Mawr College (1904–07)
University of Pennsylvania •
Quadrangle Dormitories, University of Pennsylvania (1895) •
University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology (1895–99), with
Wilson Eyre and
Frank Miles Day • Law School, University of Pennsylvania (1898–01) • Towne Building, University of Pennsylvania (1903–05)*[https://www.facilities.upenn.edu/maps/locations/veterinary-medicine-old-quadrangle Veterinary School, University of Pennsylvania (1906–11) •
St. Anthony Hall House, University of Pennsylvania (c. 1908) • Bennett Hall, University of Pennsylvania (1910) • Evans Building, School of Dentistry, University of Pennsylvania (1910), with
John T. Windrim • Leidy Labs (Zoology), University of Pennsylvania (1911)
Princeton University • Blair Hall, Princeton University (1896)[https://web.archive.org/web/20150924141005/http://www.princeton.edu/~oktour/virtualtour/english/Stop12.htm • Buyers Hall, Princeton University (1896) •
The Ivy Club, Princeton University (1897) • Stafford Little Hall, Princeton University (1898)*University Gymnasium, Princeton University (1902)
Washington University in St. Louis • [http://info.aia.org/aiarchitect/thisweek08/0516/0516d_busch2_b.jpg Busch Hall, Washington University in St. Louis (1900) • Cupples Hall I, Washington University in St. Louis (1901) • Cupples Hall II, Washington University in St. Louis (1901) • Prince Hall, Washington University in St. Louis (1901, demolished in 2006) • Ridgley Hall and Holmes Lounge, Washington University in St. Louis (1902) • Umrath Hall, Washington University in St. Louis (1902) • Eads Hall, Washington University in St. Louis (1902) • Francis Gymnasium, Washington University in St. Louis (1902) •
Brookings Hall, Washington University in St. Louis (1902). Served as the administration building during the
1904 World's Fair. • McMillan Hall, Washington University in St. Louis (1907) • Graham Chapel, Washington University in St. Louis (1909)
Buildings Elsewhere • Young Men's Christian Association, 6th & Main Streets, Richmond, Virginia (1885–87, demolished) •
Graystone (Abram Huston House), Coatesville, Pennsylvania (1889) • Charles Custis Harrison Building, 1001-05 Market Street, Philadelphia (1893–94, demolished in 1979) • Harrison Stores, 1001-25 Filbert Street, Philadelphia (1893–94, demolished in 1984) •
Alfred Craven Harrison Building, 4 South 15th Street, Philadelphia (1894–95, demolished in 1969) •
Anoatok,
Kane, Pennsylvania (1896). Now Kane Manor Inn. • Catholic Philopatrian Literary Institute, 1923 Walnut Street, Philadelphia (1897) • Lloyd Hall,
Haverford College, Haverford, Pennsylvania (1898–99) •
Overbrook School for the Blind, 6333 Malvern Avenue, Philadelphia (1899) •
Philadelphia & Reading Railroad Elkins Park Station, Spring and Park Avenues,
Elkins Park, Pennsylvania (1899) •
Lukens Main Office Building, 50 South 1st Avenue, Coatesville, Pennsylvania (1902, 1916) •
John A. Wilson Building (District Building), Washington, D.C. (1908) •
College of Physicians of Philadelphia, 19 South 22nd Street, Philadelphia (1909) • Sleighton Farm School,
Glen Mills, Pennsylvania (1909–10). A
reformatory for troubled girls, C&S designed the administration building and 9 residence buildings. The campus was abandoned in 2001, and several of its vacant buildings have been the target of
arsonists.
Darlington, Maryland Walter Cope designed more than a dozen residences in and around
Darlington, Maryland. •
Gray Gables, Darlington, Maryland (1884) ==Gallery==