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  1. Thomas Willard Sears (5 de noviembre de 1837 - 21 de mayo de 1920) fue un prominente arquitecto de Nueva Inglaterra de los siglos XIX y XX, trabajó principalmente en el Renacimiento gótico y Neorrenacimiento. En 1861, Sears abrió un estudio de arquitectura con Charles Amos Cummings.

  2. Willard Thomas Sears (November 5, 1837 – May 21, 1920) was a prominent New England architect of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries who worked primarily in the Gothic Revival and Renaissance Revival styles. In 1861, Sears opened an architectural studio with Charles Amos Cummings.

  3. Thomas Willard Sears (5 de noviembre de 1837 - 21 de mayo de 1920) fue un prominente arquitecto de Nueva Inglaterra de los siglos XIX y XX, trabajó principalmente en el Renacimiento gótico y Neorrenacimiento. En 1861, Sears abrió un estudio de arquitectura con Charles Amos Cummings.

    • History and Legacy
    • Architectural Works

    In the 1860s they kept an office in the Studio Building on Tremont Street, moving in the 1870s to Pemberton Square. Although most of their works are concentrated in New England, they also were commissioned to design buildings as far west as Utah as well as on Campobello Island in New Brunswick, Canada. Their best known work is Old South Churchin Bo...

    Academy Hall, Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts(1865, demolished)
    Brechin Hall, Andover Theological Seminary, Andover, Massachusetts(1866, demolished)
    Sears Building, Boston, Massachusetts(1868-69, demolished 1967)
    Capen School (former), South Boston, Boston, Massachusetts(1870-71)
  4. Old South Church in Boston remains one of the most significant examples of Ruskin's influence on American architecture. The architects, Charles Amos Cummings and Willard T. Sears, also designed the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. The exterior of the church is primarily built of Roxbury Conglomerate commonly called puddingstone.

  5. Willard Thomas Sears (November 5, 1837 – May 21, 1920) was a prominent New England architect of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries who worked primarily in the Gothic Revival and Renaissance Revival styles.

  6. Isabella and Jack reached out to the architect Willard Sears, who had remodeled their house in Brookline. At first the couple considered expanding their current home, combining two houses on Beacon Street.