Wilson Potter Explained
Wilson Potter (died 1936) was a New York City-based architect. A number of his works are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
His office was at 3 Union Square before moving to larger space at 22 East 17th Street in 1918.[1]
Works include:
- Broad Street School (1897), 100 Broad Street, Norwich, Connecticut, NRHP-listed
- United Bank Building (1902–04), 19-21 Main St., New Milford, Connecticut, NRHP-listed
- Hall Memorial Library (1903), Ellington, Connecticut[2]
- Bristol Public Library (1907), Bristol, Connecticut[3]
- Washington School (1907), Ossining, New York,[4] NRHP-listed
- South School (1915), 362 S. Main St., Torrington, Connecticut, NRHP-listed
- Uncasville School (1917-1918), 310 Norwich-New London Turnpike, in the Uncasville section of Montville, Connecticut, NRHP-listed
- Randall & Green Building, New Milford, Connecticut[5]
- High school, Oneida, New York[5]
- High school, Watertown, New York[5]
Notes and References
- Book: The American Architect . 1918.
- https://www.chemungvalleymuseum.org/manuscript-library?curpage=3&recID=833&seriesID=-1
- "Six(typed) letters between the Estate of Francis Hall and Wilson Potter, Architect of NYC regarding the design of the Hall Memorial Library in Ellington, Conn; dates are February 10, April 11, May 7, May 11, July 2, July 28, July 30th:all in 1903."
- Web site: About Us .
- Web site: Historical Preservation . www.westchesterhistory.com . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100410224047/http://www.westchesterhistory.com/index.php/preservation/display?town=ossining . 2010-04-10.
- Book: The Brickbuilder . 1903 . February 20, 2018.