Roberts & Woods, Architects

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Lincoln, Nebraska, 1890-1903


Partners: Artemas Roberts (1841-1944), Architect, Lincoln, Nebraska

Alfred Wilderman Woods (1857-1942), Architect, Lincoln, Nebraska

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.

Compiled Nebraska Directory Listings

Lincoln, Nebraska, 1890-1893, 1903

Buildings & Projects

School of Agriculture (1896), University of Nebraska Ag College, 37th & Holdrege, Lincoln, Nebraska.[7]

Experimental Station - Ag Communications Bldg (1899), University of Nebraska Ag College, Lincoln, Nebraska.[7]

Hussong house (ca. 1900), 1549 S 23rd, Lincoln, Nebraska.[7]

Second Presbyterian Church (1902), Southeast corner 26th & P, Lincoln, Nebraska.[1] [b]

Irma Hotel [Buffalo Bill Cody Hotel] (1902), Cody, Wyoming.

Fairview (1902-1903), 50th & Sumner, Lincoln, Nebraska.[7][8][a] NRHP form and photos

Methodist Episcopal Church (1902-03), southeast corner 3rd & Pearl, Lyons, Nebraska.[1][6] (BT04-011)

Glenville School District #49 (1903), 401 S 5th, Glenville, Nebraska.[7][8] (CY06-003) NRHP form and photos

Undated

C. F. McCain house (n.d.), 26th & R., Lincoln, Nebraska [1]

Bowers house (n.d.), 20th & R, Lincoln, Nebraska [1]

W. T. Constant house (n.d.), Lincoln, Nebraska (?) [2]

Henry Grosshans house (n.d.), Sutton, Nebraska [3]

J. I. Case Office Building (n.d.) [4]

M. E. Church (n.d.), Geneva, Nebraska [6]

Notes

a. The National Register nomination and other sources give credit to Roberts, alone; Roberts may have been the principal in charge, or this may represent a project that signaled the forthcoming end of the Roberts & Woods partnership.

b. Source [1] credits Woods, alone; This may have been a project, and not a commission; see Zimmer [7n4], who attributes the building to Fisher & Lawrie, Architects, Omaha, Nebraska.

References

1. Lincoln Trade Review 1:11 (1902): 4.

2. Lincoln Trade Review 1:12 (1902): 3. ($6,000)

3. Lincoln Trade Review 1:14 (1902): 3. (plans, 2 s fr., $2,500)

4. Lincoln Trade Review 1:21 (1902): 3. (plans, 2 s fr., $2,500)

5. Lincoln Trade Review 1:40 (1903): 3. (Roberts on vacation in Florida where he has purchased some land and talks of going into farming there).

6. Lincoln Trade Review 1:3 (1902): 4.

7. Edward F. Zimmer, “Alfred Wilderman Woods (1857-1942),” TS. April 18, 2003.

8. Listed in the National Register of Historic Places.

9. “Agriculture Experiment Station Building,” in Kay Logan-Peters, An Architectural Tour of Historic UNL, 2005. Online: http://historicbuildings.unl.edu/building.php?b=24 Accessed July 6, 2011.

Page Citation

E. F. Zimmer and D. Murphy, “Roberts & Woods, Architects,” {Template:ArchtPageCitation}} July 6, 2011. http://www.e-nebraskahistory.org/index.php?title=Place_Makers_of_Nebraska:_The_Architects Accessed, November 22, 2024.


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