Morgan & Dillon
Morgan & Dillon was a major architectural firm of Atlanta, Georgia. It later became Morgan, Dillon & Lewis.[1]
W.T. Downing worked for the firm and was its lead designer for the Healey Building. [2]
See also Bruce & Morgan.
A number of its works are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[3]
Works include (with variations in attribution):
- Citizen's and Southern Bank Building, 35 Broad St., Atlanta, Georgia (Morgan & Dillon), NRHP-listed[3]
- Early County Courthouse, Courthouse Sq., Blakely, Georgia (Morgan & Dillon), NRHP-listed[3]
- Fire Station No. 11, 30 North Ave., Atlanta, Georgia (Morgan & Dillon), NRHP-listed[3]
- Fourth National Bank of Atlanta, SW corner Peachtree and Marietta streets, Atlanta; part of the building survives as the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies[4]
- Fulton County Courthouse, 160 Pryor St., SW, Atlanta, Georgia (Morgan & Dillon), NRHP-listed[3]
- Healey Building, 57 Forsyth St., Atlanta, Georgia (Morgan & Dillon), NRHP-listed[3]
- The Metropolitan (Atlanta condominium building), 22 Marietta Street, formerly Atlanta Federal Savings, prior to that the Third National Bank of Atlanta
- One or more works in Oglethorpe University Historic District, 4484 Peachtree Rd. NE., Atlanta, Georgia (Morgan and Dillon), NRHP-listed[3]
- Retail Credit Company Home Office Building, 90 Fairlie St., SW, Atlanta, Georgia (Morgan,Dillon & Lewis), NRHP-listed[3]
- Thiesen Building, 40 S. Palafox St., Pensacola, Florida (Morgan & Dillon), NRHP-listed[3]
References
- Robert M. Craig (October 3, 2002). "New Georgia Encyclopedia: A. Ten Eyck Brown (1878-1940)".
- "New Georgia Encyclopedia: A. Downing".
- "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
- Advertisement in Atlanta Constitution, Jan. 31, 1904, p.8
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