Cannon & Fetzer
Cannon & Fetzer was an American architectural firm that operated between 1909-1937 in Salt Lake City, Utah. Lewis T. Cannon and John Fetzer were the principal architects.[1] A number of its works are listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places.[2] For a brief time between 1910-1915, the firm was named Cannon, Fetzer & Hansen after partnering with Ramm Hansen. Many of their works survive and are listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places.
Images of architectural works
- The Park Building at University of Utah
Other works include (with attribution)
- Fifth Ward Meetinghouse (built 1910), 740 S. 300 West Salt Lake City, Utah (Cannon & Fetzer), NRHP-listed
- Idaho Republican Building (build 1916), 167 W. Bridge St., Blackfoot, Idaho (Cannon & Fetzer), NRHP-listed
- Technical High School, 241 N. 300 West Salt Lake City, Utah (Cannon & Fetzer, et al.), formerly NRHP-listed
- US Post Office-Cedar City Main, 10 N. Main Cedar City, Utah (Cannon & Fetzer), NRHP-listed
- Wasatch Springs Plunge, 840 N. 300 West Salt Lake City, Utah (Cannon & Fetzer), NRHP-listed
gollark: Apple have actually been doing really amazing work, but they still have worse power constraints.
gollark: Don't think so, no.
gollark: "So you can get movies, but you can't actually play them in some regions, or unapproved devices/software, or devices with one of the *two existing* x86 CPU manufacturers, or probably unapproved OSes, and can't back them up. Sounds great, right?"
gollark: Do they *want* to encourage piracy?
gollark: I see.
References
- MacKay, Kathryn (January 31, 1980). "Inventory—Nomination Form: Wasatch Springs Plunge". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. Retrieved 2011-12-19.
- "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
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