James Tyler (1844-1919), Architect
James Tyler was born in Usk, Monmouthshire, England on September 26, 1844 to parents George and Jane Price Taylor.[10][11] Before emigrating, Tyler was a stone-cutter and carver, described by Andreas as one of England's most distinguished stone-cutters, working on the remodel of Windsor Castle and other iconic English buildings. He came to America in 1868, settling in St. Louis, Missouri, where he was engaged in the construction of the Four Courts, after which he relocated to Chicago and erected St. James Church. By 1870 he was in Omaha, Nebraska, serving as master mechanic of the post office building there. He moved to Lincoln in 1875 to perform a similar role in the construction of Lincoln's U. S. Post Office and Courthouse. He was thus employed until June, 1879, when he was appointed superintendent of construction of the State insane asylum. [1][2][5] James' brother William H. Tyler also settled in Lincoln and in 1880 established himself as a building stone supplier, often working with his brother on projects.[19] James Tyler married Emily Elizabeth Burgis in London in 1868, with whom he had five children, including a future partner in his firm, James Tyler, Jr. The elder James Tyler died on November 1, 1919 in Lincoln.[5][10][11]
This page is a contribution to the publication, Place Makers of Nebraska: The Architects. See the format and contents page for more information on the compilation and page organization.
Contents
Compiled Nebraska Directory Listings
Lincoln, Nebraska, 1878-1890, 1892-1919
Educational & Professional Associations
1870-1875: "master mechanic" for U. S. Courthouse & Post Office, Omaha, Nebraska.
1875-1879: "master mechanic" for U. S. Courthouse & Post Office, Lincoln, Nebraska.
1880-1883: architect and partner, Smith & Tyler, Architects, Lincoln, Nebraska.
1883-1892: architect and superintendent, Lincoln, Nebraska.
1894-1907: architect and partner, James Tyler & Son, Architects, Lincoln, Nebraska.
1903-1919: City of Lincoln water and light commissioner, Lincoln, Nebraska.[5][d]
1916-1919: architect and partner, Tyler, Brandt & Tyler, Architects, Lincoln, Nebraska.
Other Associations
1886-1892: Employed his son James Tyler, Jr., as a draftsman.
1889: President of Lincoln board of Guaranty Building and Loan Association of Minneapolis.[57]
1903: Employed Eugene H. Brandt (1867-1918), brother-in-law of his son James Tyler, Jr., as a draftsman.
Buildings & Projects
Early Works (Lincoln, Nebraska)
R. C. Outcault residence (1878), 1118 G, Lincoln, Nebraska.[43][48][i]
Superintendent of construction, Nebraska Insane Asylum (ca. 1879-1880), Lincoln, Nebraska.[47]
1880-1883 (Lincoln, Nebraska)
Tyler's initial architectural partnership was with George A. C. Smith, who had worked on several post offices before coming to Lincoln in 1878 to take charge of the final stage of construction of the U. S. Courthouse and Post Office there. See Smith & Tyler, Architects for an account of additional work of their partnership.
John Fitzgerald house (ca. 1880), Lincoln, Nebraska.[4][6][20]
Fitzgerald Block (1882), 120 N. 10th, Lincoln, Nebraska.[3][4][21][a]
Webster Block (1882), 230-238 S. 11th, Lincoln, Nebraska.[23][43]b]
Aaron S. Raymond residence (ca. 1882), 1642 R Street, Lincoln, Nebraska.[43][46]b]
Charles M. Leighton residence (ca. 1882), 1700 R, Lincoln, Nebraska.[43]
1883-1892 (Lincoln, Nebraska)
James Tyler practiced independently for a decade before forming a partnership with his son James around 1893. James Jr. was a draftsman in his father's office from 1886.
C. C. Burr residence (1883), NW corner of 16th & L, Lincoln, Nebraska.[24][43]
Townsend Block (1883), Lincoln, Nebraska.[10]
Park School (1883), NW corner of 8th & F, Lincoln, Nebraska.[25]
Three-story brick building for Mrs. Kate Coakley (1884), Lincoln, Nebraska.[26]
Brick school house (1884), Dewitt, Saline County, Nebraska.[27]
Plans and specifications for taking down and rebuilding a two-story brick building for M. Noonan (1884), Lincoln, Nebraska.[28]
City of Lincoln Engine house (1884), SE corner of Market square (bounded by 9th, 10th, Q & R), Lincoln, Nebraska.[29]
St. Charles Hotel (1884), Lincoln, Nebraska.[43][44]
Two-story brick school building for Normal school (1885), Peru, Nebraska.[30]
Frame residence for S. Schwab (1885), Lincoln, Nebraska.[31]
Brick building for Aeneas Hurlbut (1885), NW corner of 10th & P, Lincoln, Nebraska.[31]
Remodeling and repair of the north chapel wing of University of Nebraska building (1885), Lincoln, Nebraska.[32]
M. M. White residence (1885), corner of 17th & C, Lincoln, Nebraska.[33]
Hargreaves Bros. warehouse (1885), 745 O Street, Lincoln, Nebraska.[43]
Tremont House (1885), SW corner of 8th & P, Lincoln, Nebraska.[43][45]
Dr. James O. Carter's block (ca. 1885), 1020 O Street, Lincoln, Nebraska.[43]
Thomas Carr's block (ca. 1885), 926 P, Lincoln, Nebraska.[43]
H. A. Tebbetts residence (1886), Lincoln, Nebraska.[34]
Barn for John Fitzgerald (1886), Lincoln, Nebraska.[35]
John R. Clark house (1886-1887), SW corner 20th & F, Lincoln, Nebraska.[6][4][8]
Touzalin Hotel (1886-1887), Wymore, Nebraska.[43][49][j]
Burrs' Block (1887), NE corner 12th & O, Lincoln, Nebraska.[3][4][10][36][43] (LC13:C09-002)
Brick block for James Ledwith (1887), Lincoln, Nebraska.[37]
Brick block for M. Noonan (1887), Lincoln, Nebraska.[38][43]
Barr & Lamaster Block (1887), Lincoln, Nebraska.[3][43]
Brick block for John Sheedy (1887), Lincoln, Nebraska.[39][43]
Workshop at State Penitentiary (1887), Lincoln, Nebraska.[10][40]
Fitzgerald Block (1887-1888), West Lincoln, Nebraska.[41][42][h]
Masonic Temple (1887-1889), Fremont, Nebraska.[3][50]
J. R. Johnson house (1888), 1422 Boswell, Crete, Nebraska.[3][13][51] (SA01-12)
Proposal for Lancaster County Courthouse (1888), Lincoln, Nebraska.[52][k]
Proposals for a wholesale house for John Fitzgerald (1888), SW corner of 10th & M, Lincoln, Nebraska.[16][f]
Fitzgerald Building/warehouse (1888), 701 P, Lincoln, Nebraska.[6][a]
Seven-room brick school house (1888), Ulysses, Nebraska.[17]
William Meagher residence (1888), 1019 F Street, Lincoln, Nebraska.[53]
E. A. Morgan residence (1888), J near 18th, Lincoln, Nebraska.[54][l]
Nebraska Stock Yards Company: new Store House, Chill Room, and other additions to Packing House #1 (1888), West Lincoln, Nebraska.[14]
A. M. Davis residence (1889), 17th & K, Lincoln, Nebraska.[55][56]
J. H. Ames Mansion (1889), Pleasant Hill (now South 20th at Sumner), Lincoln, Nebraska.[56][m]
Mayer Brothers and Louie Meyer’s stores (1889-1890), 10th Street, LIncoln, Nebraska.[58]
William H. Tyler house (1890-1891), 808 D St., Lincoln, Nebraska.[7] (LC13:C07-001)
Robert E. Moore residence (1891), Lincoln, Nebraska.[3][4][18]
Sacred Heart Catholic Church (1892), NE corner 13th & Ivy, Crete, Nebraska.[3] (SA01-020)
Halter Block (1892-1893), SE corner of 11th & P Streets, Lincoln, Nebraska.[15][e]
Plans for J. T. Bullard mansion (1893), McCook, Nebraska.[4]
1893-1907 (Lincoln, Nebraska)
The father and the son practiced together as James Tyler & Son for over a decade, with projects throughout Lincoln and Nebraska. As early as 1903, James Sr. also began to be listed in Lincoln city directories as City Water Commissioner, while his architectural practice apparently continued. See James Tyler & Son, Architects for an account of the projects of their partnership.
1908-1915 (Lincoln, Nebraska)
For several years the elder James Tyler was listed in Lincoln city directories solely as Lincoln's Water Commissioner and superintendent of the city's Lighting Plant. During the same period, his son James Tyler, Jr. formed a partnership Tyler & Brandt with Eugene H. Brandt. The wives of James, Jr. and Eugene--Julia and Jessie, respectively--were sisters, the daughters of W. W. and Mary E. Palmer.
1916-1919 (Lincoln, Nebraska)
In the last years of his life, James Tyler rejoined his son in architectural practice as Tyler, Brandt & Tyler. Eugene H. Brandt died in 1918 and James Tyler, Sr. died in 1919, but the firm name continued unchanged until at least 1924. The works of that partnership are listed on a separate page for Tyler, Brandt & Tyler, Architects.
Undated
Donald H. Pegler Garage Bldg. (n.d.), 17th & P, Lincoln, Nebraska.[9]
Disputed Attributions
1st National Bank/State Block (1874), 10th & "O" St., Lincoln, Nebraska.[10][c]
Ganter Block (1909), NW corner of 12th & O Street, Lincoln, Nebraska.[10][g]
Notes
a. "Capitalist" John Fitzgerald developed buildings called "Fitzgerald Block" in at least three locales--Plattsmouth, Lincoln, and West Lincoln--and built so many structures in Nebraska's capital city that any contemporary reference to "Fitzgerald Block" must be scrutinized carefully to distinguish one from another. In the 1883 Lincoln city directory, John Fitzgerald's business address was 111 N. 9th. That may have been the earliest of Fitzgerald's Lincoln buildings, as newspaper report of 1879 noted that a new grocery company called "Plummer, Perry & Co.," with Fitzgerald himself being the partner referred to by "& Co.,") was opening in "Fitzgerald's Block, on the west side of the {Government] square."[22] That address was also one of two "Fitzgerald Bldgs" identified in the 1889 city directory--111 N. 9th and 120 N. 10th. The latter may correspond to Pen & Sunlight Sketches of Lincoln's reference to a "Fitzgerald Block" as a work of the firm Smith & Tyler, dating from the period they practiced together--1880-1883.[3] In 1891, the directory lists "Fitzgerald Block" at "Grand avenue, West Lincoln" and "Fitzgerald Building" at P, southeast corner Seventh. The "Fitzgerald Block" in West Lincoln and the 7th & P building were the work of James Tyler, built in 1887-1888 and 1888-1889, respectively, when he was a solo practitioner. The Lincoln News of October 6, 1888 described "The Fitzgerald block at the corner of P and 7th," then under construction, as "one of the most substantial mercantile blocks in the city." A lengthy description of the building, presented as an interview with Tyler, appears in The Daily Call of December 5, 1888.[6][16]
b. Nebraska State Journal in January 1882 announced an upcoming publication containing illustrations of some of Tyler's early projects. The Illustrated State Journal was projected to be “the most perfect and complete specimens of a picture paper ever published in the west. It will contain fine engravings of the capitol and B & M depot, state University, insane asylum, perspective and birds’-eye views of the city, penitentiary, post office, Webster & McMurtry’s, Humphrey Bros’., Holmes & Lau’s, Davis’ and other blocks, the Commercial and other hotels, A. S. Raymond’s, Mrs. Israel Putnam’s, Chancellor Fairfield’s and many other beautiful residences. Four pages will be devoted to illustrations and the other four pages to valuable reading material and advertisements.” The newspaper estimated that there would be two editions of 20,000 each.[46]
c. Tyler is credited [10] with the design of the First National Bank/State Block which stood on the SE corner of 10th & O in Lincoln, but the datestone on that building is clearly visible in historic photos, reading "STATE BLOCK 1874," which precedes Tyler's relocation from Omaha to Lincoln.[22]
d. Tyler's obituary notes he had been Lincoln's water commissioner for 16 years.[5]
e. The Lincoln Daily Call of January 1, 1893 notes "Among the improvements in the building line, with which Lincoln has been blessed during the past year, none can outclass the new Knights of Pythias Castle Hall block, which is being erected by Alexis Halter on the corner of 13th and P streets, and a cut of which appears in this paper." The column is headed "The Halter Block" and an accompanying illustration is captioned the same. The estimated cost of the 5-story building, with an elevator, is cited at $110,000. It is also noted that "The plans have been prepared by James Tyler architect, of this city, and the work is being done under his supervision."[15]
f. When local business titan John Fitzgerald reportedly acquired the northeast quarter of Block 86 (Original Plat of Lincoln, SW corner of 10th & M) in 1888, rumors flew as to how he would develop the site. Lincoln Daily Call of May 9, 1888 suggested a grand hotel and opera house, to which Nebraska State Journal on May 12, 1888 rather tartly replied "THE JOURNAL would like to corroborate that report this morning, but finds that it cannot do so and still remain in the straight path of truth that has been followed so faithfully for twenty years." The Journal then goes on to announce that Fitzgerald "will put up a fine block on the corner in question, completing the same in time for occupancy this year," and describes in detail "Plans for the structure...now being prepared by Architect James Tyler." The structure was to be four stories tall, above a basement, and built to house two wholesale establishments. Two alternatives are described for the exterior: "One is in the strict classical style" but "The design that seems to meet with the most general favor, however, follows the modern Romanesque style." Fitzgerald did not carry out any project on the 10th & M corner before his death in 1895. His Fitzgerald Block warehouse at 7th & P, designed by Tyler, appears to have been related to the "modern Romanesque" double warehouse described in the Journal article. [16]
g. Ganter Block at the NW corner of 12th & O Streets in downtown Lincoln began as a three story office and retail building, constructed in 1909. Building permits for that construction identity Woods & Cordner as the project's architects. In 1915 three more stories were added atop the 25-foot-wide building, and again the building permits named A. W. Woods as the architect.
h. John Fitzgerald platted "West Lincoln" in 1885 as president of the Nebraska Stockyards Company of Lincoln, consisting of eight block-faces of narrow commercial lots and the rest of the 24-block development devoted to 50'x142' house lots. As the name of his company indicated, he soon developed stockyards and packing plants in the vicinity, near his already-established brickyards. In the late 1880s, Lincoln newspapers were attentive to progress in the new industrial town-site. For instance, a brief article in Lincoln Daily News of March 5, 1887 reported: "Architect Hawkins has in hand the plans of a three [sic] story brick and stone block of two stores and a bank on first floor with office rooms, hall for lectures, meetings, religious exercises, etc., above. A change may be made and third story added. Whatever the dimensions it will add to the value of this new industrial centre, and encouraging for other similar structures to accommodate the demand already quite noisey for more mercantile rooms and offices." Apparently the change was not from two stories to three, but rather a change in architects. Nearly six months later, John Fitzgerald posted a "Notice to Contractors" in Nebraska State Journal of October 23, 1887 soliciting "Sealed proposals" for "the construction of a brick block at West Lincoln," and indicating that the plans and specifications could be viewed at James Tyler's office. A "West Lincoln" column in Nebraska State Journal of May 2, 1888 reported "The finishing touches are just being added to the Fitzgerald block, and it will soon be ready for occupancy. It is a handsome brick block, which would do credit to O street. It is hinted that a bank and the post-office will likely go into this building." Perhaps Fitzgerald engaged Tyler as superintendent to construct Hawkins' design; more likely he rejected Hawkins' work and hired Tyler, who did several Fitzgerald projects including his home, Mount Emerald. A fine contemporary photograph of the Fitzgerald Block in West Lincoln was published in 1889 in Lincoln Picturesque and Descriptive, which is reprinted in Lincoln's Early Architecture.[41][42]
i. The 1888 article "Evidences of Architectural Skill As Furnished by Mr. Tyler" in the Nebraska State Journal identifies well over a dozen of Tyler's projects, including several residences. Among the group listed is a residence for R. C. Outcault, which seemingly corresponds to the large, frame Queen Anne style house which is extant (in 2018) at the northwest corner of 11th and D Streets in Lincoln. Richard C. Outcault built and occupied that house around 1885. However, the 1892 publication Pen and Sunlight Sketches of Omaha attributes R. C. Outcault's house to J. H. W. Hawkins. Possibly one of the architects designed the 11th & D house and the other superintended its construction. Maybe one or the other of the sources is simply in error. However, it is also possible that both sources are correct, if the authors were referring to two different residences. A gossipy snippet in Lincoln's Daily Evening News of 1885 notes that "Robt. Mitchell, Jr., purchased the Outcault residence on G street, yesterday. Interested parties are now busily conjuring as to who the prospective future Mrs. M will be who becomes mistress of this elegant home." The house Outcault sold to Robert Mitchell in 1885 was 1118 G Street. Outcault acquired 1118 G Street in 1881 from Theodore Hardenberg, who in turn had built the house in 1878. Hawkins was practicing in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania at that time, but Tyler was then in Lincoln at the dawn of his architectural career. In addition, Hawkins' early Lincoln projects included the Watkins House less than two blocks west of the big Outcault House at l1th and D, and the Zehrung House directly west across D Street. In style and scale, Outcault closely resembles Hawkins' Queen Anne residences. Therefore on these pages, Hawkins is credited with the extant house at 11th and D, while 1118 G is attributed to Tyler.[43][48] (E.F.Zimmer)
j. Nebraska State Journal in June 1887 described the Wymore hotel as four stories (including basement), 140'x75', and offering 50 rooms. According to the Omaha Bee later that year, "The new Touzalin hotel at Wymore liens toward bankruptcy before it is opened. Mechanics and material men have shingled it with $20,000 worth of claims."[49]
k. In February 1888, at least thirteen architects vied for the commission to design Lancaster County Commissioners. Nebraska-based architects included O. H. Placey, Ellis, Mendelssohn, Fisher & Lawrie, Hodges & Son of Omaha; and Tyler, Hawkins, and Gray of Lincoln.[52]
l. The Lincoln Daily News of August 28, 1888 provides a laudatory description of this house and comments "The designs for this model structure were furnished by James Tyler, Lincoln's reliable architect, who also superintended every detail of construction."[54]
m. The Ames residence was described in 1889 as "This house is to be sixty-six fee long by sixty-two fee wide, will be two stories in height and cost when completed about $15,000."[56]
References
1. A. T. Andreas, History of the State of Nebraska (1882), 1080.
2. A. T. Andreas, History of the State of Nebraska (1882), 1056.
3. "James Tyler," in Pen & Sunlight Sketches of Lincoln (Chicago: Phoenix Publishing, 1893), 108.
4. Lincoln, Nebraska: Why We Grow (Lincoln, Nebraska: Thomas H. Hyde, 1893), 74.
5. "James Tyler Passes Away," Sunday State Journal (November 2, 1919), 8A:6 (and portrait); (Lincoln) Evening State Journal (November 1, 1919), 1 (with portrait).
6. Ed Zimmer, email to David Murphy, October 26, 2000; regarding Fitzgerald Block at 7th & P: (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (September 4, 1888), 8 ("Work will commence next week..."); "Solid Growth. Short Review of the City's Wonderful Progress...Newsy Notes of Doings in and About the City," Lincoln (Nebraska) News (October 6, 1888), 4; "In the City. The New Fitzgerald Block Well Under Way," (Lincoln, Nebraska) Daily Call (December 5, 1888), 4.
7. Listed in the National Register of Historic Places.
8. William Wood, “Postcard from Lincoln,” Newsletter of the Preservation Association of Lincoln 17:1 (Spring 2009), 3.
9. Thomas Lee Kaspar (1951-2017), Architect, comp. Inventory of architectural records in the archives of Davis Fenton Stange Darling, Architects, Lincoln, Nebraska. 1996. Nebraska State Historical Society, RG3748, Box 16.
10. Mrs. Maryan Tyler Matthew. Personal interview. November 27, 1978.
11. England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1837-1915 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2006. Accessed through Ancestry.com
12. 1900 United States Census. s.v. “James Tyler,” Lincoln, Lancaster County, Nebraska. E.D. 57, sheet 4, line 57.
13. Photos by David Murphy, October 1975. NSHS 7510/1:25
14. Contract between Mr. William R. Berger, Mr. James Tyler, and the Nebraska Stock Yard Company president and other employees. Signed February 13, 1888.
15. "The Halter Block," Lincoln (Nebraska) Daily Call (January 1, 1893), 5; with illustration.
16. Lincoln (Nebraska) Evening Call (May 9, 1888), 3; "The Fitzgerald Block," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (May 12, 1888), 7.
17. "Notice to Contractors," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (July 20, 1888), 2.
18. Matthew Hansen, James McKee, Edward Zimmer, Lincoln's Early Architecture, (Arcadia Publishing: Charleston, South Carolina, 2014), 55 (illustration).
19. "W. H. Tyler," in Pen & Sunlight Sketches of Lincoln (Chicago: Phoenix Publishing, 1893), 87.
20. Edward F. Zimmer, The Near South Walking Tours: V. 2 (Lincoln, Nebraska: Near South Neighborhood Association, 1990), 61-62.
21. A. T. Andreas, History of the State of Nebraska (Chicago: Western Historical Company, 1882), 1056.
22. Lincoln Picturesque and Descriptive (George B. Pratt: Neenah, Wisconsin, 1889).
23. "Notice to Carpenters," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (October 17, 1882), 4.
24. "Notice to Contractors," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (April 19, 1883), 8.
25. "Notice to Contractors," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (May 24, 1883), 7.
26. "Notice to Contractors," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (April 15, 1884), 8.
27. "Sealed Proposals Will Be Received..." (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (May 24, 1884), 7.
28. "Proposals Will Be Received Until 6 p.m...." (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (June 10, 1884), 7; "Notice to Contractors," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (August 9, 1884), 8.
29. "The City Council. Petitions Presented, Ordinances Passed and Claims Allowed...Reports of Committees," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (September 9, 1884), 1; "Proposals Wile [sic] Be Received at Office of the City Clerk..." (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (September 20, 1884), 7.
30. "Notice to Contractors," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (June 12, 1885), 7.
31. "Notice to Contractors," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (August 4, 1885), 8; (September 8, 1885), 8.
32. "Notice to Contractors," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (August 12, 1885), 8.
33. "Sweet Home," Lincoln (Nebraska) Evening News (August 29, 1885), 4.
34. "Notice to Contractors," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (April 16, 1886), 8.
35. "Notice to Contractors," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (October 16, 1886), 8.
36. “The Boom. It Strikes the Town. Past, Present and Future of Lincoln Realty. Some Facts Regarding the Activity in Lincoln Dirt.” (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (February 20, 1887), 4.
37. "Notice to Contractors," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (March 19, 1887), 1.
38. "Notice to Contractors," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (April 10, 1887), 1.
39. "Notice to Contractors," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (June 17, 1887), 4.
40. "New Public Buildings. The Board of Public Lands and Buildings Award Several Important Contracts," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (July 29, 1887), 8.
41. "Notice to Contractors," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (October 23, 1887), 8: "West Lincoln," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (May 2, 1888), 7; illustrated (photo) in Lincoln Picturesque and Descriptive (George B. Pratt: Neenah, Wisconsin, 1889); reprinted in Matthew Hansen, J. L. McKee, E. F. Zimmer, Lincoln's Early Architecture (Arcadia Publishing: Charleston, South Carolina, 2014), 49.
42. Plat of "West Lincoln Lancaster Co. Neb.," signed by John Fitzgerald, June 23, 1885. Plat 222, Office of Lancaster County Engineer.
43. "Evidences of Architectural Skill As Furnished by Mr. Tyler," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (January 1, 1888), 8.
44. Ed Zimmer, Historic Haymarket, Lincoln, Nebraska (Lincoln, Nebraska: Lincoln Haymarket Development Corporation, 2014), 49.
45. Ed Zimmer, Historic Haymarket, Lincoln, Nebraska (Lincoln, Nebraska: Lincoln Haymarket Development Corporation, 2014), 38.
46. “The Illustrated State Journal,” (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (January 25, 1882), 4.
47. Advertisement of Smith & Tyler, "Architects, Superintendents, and Builders" notes under James Tyler: "Late Supt. of Construction, Nebraska Insane Asylum," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (October 5, 1880), 2.
48. "Mr. Hardenberg is erecting a dwelling house in the south part of the city," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal, (October 4, 1876); (Lincoln, Nebraska) Daily Evening News (March 18, 1885), 4; Lancaster County Deeds V:529 (1877), 10:111 (1881), 6:357 (1885).
49. Incorporation of Touzalin hotel company, McCook (Nebraska) Tribune (March 25, 1886), 2; "Wymore and Blue Springs. Great Strides Made by the Twin Cities of the Blue," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (June 5, 1887), 23; "State and Territory. Nebraska Jottings," Omaha (Nebraska) Daily Bee (September 30, 1887), 4.
50. "Nebraska in Brief" (cornerstone laying of Fremont Masonic Temple), (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (August 13, 1888), 4; "Over the State" (dedication of Fremont Masonic Temple), (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (January 13, 1889), 4.
51. "Notice to Contractors," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (January 4, 1888), 8.
52. "After a Courthouse. The County Commissioners Commence the Work of Examining Plans--A Large Number of Architects in the Competition," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (February 22, 1888), 2.
53. "Notice to Contractors," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (August 18, 1888), 8.
54. "Another Attractive Lincoln Home Ready for Occupancy," Lincoln (Nebraska) Daily News (August 28, 1888), 4.
55. "Building and Trade," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (March 24, 1889), 3.
56. "A Season of Solid Growth. Lincoln Shows Great Building Activity...Fifteen Hundred Carpenters Employed in the City and Environs--Beautiful Residences..." (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (June 23, 1889), 6.
57. Lincoln (Nebraska) Evening Call (May 13, 1889), 5.
58. “A Business-like Move,” (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (December 1, 1889), 3.
59. “The Newman Building,”and “The Mayer Bros.’ Block,” (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (February 9, 1890), 8.
Page Citation
E. Zimmer & D. Murphy, “James Tyler (1844-1919), Architect,” in David Murphy, Edward F. Zimmer, and Lynn Meyer, comps. Place Makers of Nebraska: The Architects. Lincoln: Nebraska State Historical Society, January 26, 2018. http://www.e-nebraskahistory.org/index.php?title=Place_Makers_of_Nebraska:_The_Architects Accessed, November 26, 2024.
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