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Ralph Adams Cram - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Ralph Adams Cram (1863–1942) was a Bostonian Bohemian, writer, historian, lecturer, social critic, and above all a highly successful architect in his time. Cram and Ferguson, the practice he founded in the late 1880s, survives to this day.
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Ralph Adams Cram was born in 1863 in Hamton Falls, New Hampshire.[1] Eighteen years later he left his father to study architecture. What he saw in architecture appalled him. In his own opinion, nothing really bad had been done before 1830. But after that, architecture fell to a low level for the next 50 years.
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Hutchinson encyclopedia article about Cram, Ralph Adams. Cram, Ralph Adams. Information about Cram, Ralph Adams in the Hutchinson encyclopedia. ... Craigievar Castle; Craik, Dinah Maria; Craik, Kenneth John William; Crail; Craiova; crake; Cram, Donald James; Cram, Ralph Adams; Cram, Steve; Cramer's rule; Cramer,
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Ralph Adams Cram page at The Literary Gothic, the web's premier guide to Gothic and supernaturalist literature written prior to 1950 ... "Ralph Adams Cram: The Man, His Work, and His Legacy at Princeton University"
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Following in the footsteps of Boston Bohemia, 1881–1900, Douglass Shand-Tucci's widely praised portrait of Ralph Adams Cram's early years, this volume tells the story of Cram's later career as one of America's leading cultural figures and most accomplished architects.
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Ralph Adams Cram & The Winged Creatures ... Miss Macfarlane noted that Osborn had once worked for Ralph Adams Cram. Cram, the great Gothicist, placed heavy emphasis on Christian symbolism in architecture. For Osborn’s work in Pittsburgh, it is unclear whether he was working for Shadyside’s architect, Wilson Eyre,
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Cram, Ralph Adams, 1863-1942: Black Spirits and White: A Book of Ghost Stories (PDF 1.4 files at horrormasters.com) ... Cram, Ralph Adams, 1863-1942: Excalibur: An Arthurian Drama (HTML at Rochester) ... Cram, Ralph Adams, 1863-1942: Six Lectures on Architecture (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1917), also by Thomas...
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Cram, Ralph Adam ... (b Hampton Falls, NH, 16 Dec 1863; d Boston, 22 Sept 1942). American architect and writer. He was the leading Gothic Revival architect in North America in the first half of the 20th century, at the head of an informal school known as the Boston Gothicists, who transformed American church design.
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Towards the Great Peace by Cram, Ralph Adams, 1863-1942. Politics ... TOWARDS THE GREAT PEACE BY RALPH ADAMS CRAM, LITT.D., LL.D. 1922 INTRODUCTION For the course of lectures I am privileged to deliver at this time, I desire to take, in some sense as a text, a prayer that came to my attention at the outset of my...
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