American architect (1848-1920)
This article is about Maryland architect. For the Erie Railroad architect, see
George E. Archer.
George Archer (1848–1920) was an American architect.[1][2] A native of Baltimore, and Maryland and a graduate of Princeton University in Princeton, New Jersey, he designed several churches, banks, and other buildings in the Mid-Atlantic states of the U.S.
Works
- Harford National Bank at Bel Air, Maryland, the county seat of Harford County, Maryland, northeast of Baltimore.
- Walters Bath No. 2 on the 900 block of Washington Boulevard, in the southwest area of Baltimore, Maryland in the Pigtown / Washington Village neighborhood.
- Two private homes in Sudbrook Park, Maryland on the west side of suburban Baltimore County.[2][3]
- Buildings at the College of Notre Dame of Maryland, on North Charles Street, (later renamed the Notre Dame of Maryland University)[2]
- Graham-Hughes House, his 1888 landmark residence on the southwest corner of North Charles and West Madison Streets, facing Washington Place and the famous Washington Monument in the Mount Vernon-Belvedere neighborhood of central Baltimore, Maryland.
References