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| reason=There is more information about ''Watson & Huckel'' in the [[Frank Rushmore Watson|Watson]] and [[Samuel Huckel|Huckel]] than in the actual article for ''Watson & Huckel''.
| reason=There is more information about ''Watson & Huckel'' in the [[Frank Rushmore Watson|Watson]] and [[Samuel Huckel|Huckel]] articles than in the actual article for ''Watson & Huckel''.
| date=November 2018
| date=November 2018
| talksection=Consolidate_Information_from_Watson_and_Huckel
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Revision as of 06:27, 17 November 2018

Watson & Huckel was an architectural firm from Philadelphia that existed as a partnership between Frank Rushmore Watson and Samuel Huckel between 1902 and 1917. The firm was known as a prolific office that had many church commissions—Watson specialized in church architecture and Huckel worked with him until 1917, the year of his (Huckel's) death; the pair worked on many projects from Worcester Union Station to the Cumberland County Courthouse and a great deal of churches. During the early years of their partnership, Watson and Huckel maintained a New York office, however few projects were listed out of that office and they did eventually close it.[1]

See Also

  1. ^ Sandra L. Tatman. "Watson & Huckel (fl. 1902–1917)". The Philadelphia Architects and Buildings Project. Retrieved 16 Nov 2018.