John Ludwig Wees Explained
John Ludwig Wees (1861 - 1942) was an architect in the United States. Several buildings he designed in St. Louis, Missouri and Paris, Texas are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. He immigrated to the United States and moved west to St. Louis where he eventually became a partner at the firm Beinke & Wees.[1]
He was involved in a lawsuit seeking fees for work he did while part of Beinke & Wees.[2] He moved to Paris, Texas after a fire destroyed part of its downtown.[1]
Work
- Beethoven Conservatory, 2301 Locust St. in St. Louis (Beinke & Wees). NRHP listed
- Lewis Dozier Mansion in St. Louis[3]
- 1907 Dorris Motor Car Company Building at 4063-4065 Forest Park Avenue in St. Louis, NRHP listed[4]
- Dorris Motor Car Company building at 4100 Laclede in St. Louis
- Old B'nai El Temple, 3666 Flad Avenue in St. Louis. NRHP listed.[5]
- Edwin F. Guth Company Complex at 2615 Washington Avenue in St. Louis, NRHP listed
- Halsey-Packard Building, 2201-11 Locust in St. Louis. NRHP listed
- Lister Building, 4500 Olive St. in St. Louis.[6] NRHP listed.
- Scott-Roden Mansion, 425 S. Church St. in Paris, Texas. NRHP listed
- Building in Paris Commercial Historic District in Paris, Texas
Notes and References
- Web site: Landmarks Association of St. Louis :: Architects :: John Ludwig Wees FAIA (1861-1942). www.landmarks-stl.org.
- Web site: Cases Determined in the St. Louis and the Kansas City Courts of Appeals of the State of Missouri. Missouri Courts of. Appeals. July 25, 1898. E.W. Stephens.. Google Books.
- Web site: Lewis Dozier Mansion - Portland and Westmoreland Places - St. Louis, Missouri - NRHP Historic Districts - Contributing Buildings on Waymarking.com. www.waymarking.com.
- Web site: From Dorris Motor Co. to Biotech Startups, A Building's History of Entrepreneurship. September 22, 2014.
- Web site: National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination Form.
- Web site: Vanishing STL: Lister Building Annex - Olive & Taylor. Vanishing. Stl. March 20, 2007.