• Grace Episcopal Church, Windsor, Connecticut (1864–65). • Grace Episcopal Church Rectory, 301 Broad Street, Windsor, Connecticut (circa 1865–70), (attributed). • Asylum Avenue Baptist Church, 868 Asylum Avenue, Hartford, Connecticut (1872, altered). Part of Asylum Avenue Historic District. • Seyms Street Jail, Hartford, Connecticut (1873, demolished 1978). • Elizabeth Chapel, Connecticut Retreat for the Insane, Hartford, Connecticut (1875). Now
The Institute of Living. •
Temple Beth Israel Synagogue, 21 Charter Oak Avenue, Hartford, Connecticut (1876). Now Charter Oak Cultural Center. •
Carl H. Conrads House, 1628 Boulevard, West Hartford, Connecticut (year?). • White Hall, Connecticut Retreat for the Insane, Hartford, Connecticut (1877). Now
The Institute of Living. •
G. Fox & Company Department Store, 406-10 Main Street, Hartford, Connecticut (1880, burned 1917). •
Northam Memorial Chapel and Gallup Memorial Gateway, Cedar Hill Cemetery, 453 Fairfield Avenue, Hartford, Connecticut (1882). •
Hartford Public High School, 39 Hopkins Street, Hartford, Connecticut (1882, expanded 1897, demolished 1963). • Thayer Monument, Lake View Cemetery,
Skaneateles, New York, 1882–83,
Carl Conrads, sculptor. •
Union Station, Hartford, Connecticut (1889), conceived by Keller, executed by
Shepley, Rutan and Coolidge. • Columbia Street Row Houses, Hartford, Connecticut, 12 houses on east side (1888), west side (1889). Part of George Keller Historic District. • Park Terrace Row Houses, Hartford, Connecticut (1895). Keller received the house at 26 Park Terrace in lieu of his design fee, and lived there for the rest of his life. • 60 Cone Street, Hartford, Connecticut (1895). Part of West End North Historic District. • Grace Episcopal Church Parish House, Windsor, Connecticut (1898). • Simsbury United Methodist Church, 799 Hopmeadow Street, Simsbury, Connecticut (1908). • Albert Pope Drinking Fountain,
Pope Park, Hartford, Connecticut (1913). •
J. P. Morgan Tomb,
Cedar Hill Cemetery, Hartford, Connecticut, circa 1913.
Libraries Biographer David F. Ransom calls Keller's three small libraries "the crowning achievement of his career." •
Norfolk Public Library, Norfolk, Connecticut (1888–89). Keller doubled the size of the library in 1911, but maintained the domestic scale of its
Shingle Style exterior. • Ansonia Public Library,
Ansonia, Connecticut (1891–92). • Granville Public Library,
Granville, Massachusetts (1902). ==Personal==