Philadelphia •
Odd Fellows Cemetery Gatehouse, 24th & Diamond Streets, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (circa 1849, demolished circa 1951). •
Spring Garden Institute, 523-25 North Broad Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1851–52), torn down 1972. • Lewis Building, 239-41 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1852). • Second Dutch Reformed Church, 817 North 7th Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1852–54). In 1917, this became St. Nicholas Russian Orthodox Church. •
Gaul-Forrest House, 1326-36 North Broad Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1853–54), attributed to Button. • First Baptist Church, Broad & Arch Streets, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1853–56, demolished 1898). • First Dutch Reformed Church, 7th & Spring Garden Streets, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1853–55). •
Arch Street Presbyterian Church, 1726-32 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1855), Hoxie & Button. •
Mount Moriah Cemetery Gatehouse, 6299 Kingsessing Avenue, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1855). • Leland Building, 37-39 South 3rd Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1855). • Joseph H. Schenck Building, 535 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1869–72, partially demolished 1938, demolished 1959).
Camden, New Jersey • Second Presbyterian Church, 416 South 4th Street, Camden, New Jersey (1865–66). • First Presbyterian Church, 5th & Penn Streets, Camden, New Jersey (1871–73). • (Second) Camden City Hall, Haddon Avenue & Benson Street, Camden, New Jersey (1874–75, demolished 1930). • Richard Fetters School, 3rd & Walnut Streets, Camden, New Jersey (1875). A boys grammar school diagonally opposite the Mulford School. • Isaac S. Mulford School, 3rd & Walnut Streets., Camden, New Jersey (1875, demolished post-1956). A girls grammar school diagonally opposite the Fetters School. • John W. Mickle School, 6th & Van Hook Streets, Camden, New Jersey (1875–76, demolished 1971).
Cape May, New Jersey • Stockton Hotel, Cape May, New Jersey (1868–69). •
John B. McCreary House, 34 Gurney Street, Cape May, New Jersey (1869–70). • Jackson's Club House, 635 Columbia Avenue, Cape May, New Jersey (1872). • Stockton Place Houses (row of 10 balloon-frame houses), 12-30 Gurney Street, Cape May, New Jersey (1871–72, 2 houses demolished). • Expansion of Chalfonte Hotel, Howard & Sewell Streets, Cape May, New Jersey (1879). •
Congress Hall Hotel, 251 Beach Avenue, Cape May, New Jersey (1879). The previous Congress Hall Hotel burned in 1878. • Windsor Hotel, Windsor Street & Beach Avenue, Cape May, New Jersey (1879, burned 1979). • J. R. Evans House, 207 Congress Place, Cape May, New Jersey (1882–83). • E. C. Knight House, 203 Congress Place, Cape May, New Jersey (1882–83). • Atlantic Terrace Houses (row of 7 balloon-frame houses), Jackson Street, Cape May, New Jersey (1891–92).
Elsewhere • (First)
Alabama State Capitol, Montgomery, Alabama (1846–47, burned and demolished 1849). • Knox Hall, 419 South Perry Street, Montgomery, Alabama (1848). • Central Bank of Alabama, 1 Dexter Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama (1854). Now Alabama State Council on the Arts. •
Adams County Courthouse, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania (1858–59). • Abram Minis House, 204 East Jones Street, Savannah, Georgia (1859–60). • Alterations to Cargill House, 1316 3rd Avenue, Columbus, Georgia (circa 1860). •
Evergreen Cemetery gatehouse, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania (1855). ==Gallery==