Frederick Mathesius

Frederick Mathesius was an American architect who was partnered with Charles Alonzo Rich at the firm Rich, Mathesius and Koyl, until Rich retired in 1932. After the firm broke up Mathesius continued practicing architecture; he worked with the firm that won the 1939 contest for the design of the U.S. Post Office in Montpelier, Vermont.[1]

Notes

  1. Meacham, Scott B. "'The Shaping Hand Was at All Points the Same': Charles Alonzo Rich Builds the New Dartmouth," Dartmouth College Library Bulletin, April 1998, Vol. XXXVIII(NS) No. 2, ISSN 0011-6750. Retrieved 3 April 2007.


gollark: Actually, come to think of it, you would probably need a pretty powerful microcontroller to hold and handle the whole database of time zone insanity.
gollark: An RTG might be better for the whole "overengineering" thing than solar power, but they're pretty hard to get hold of, and it might be a bit heavy.
gollark: Just stick in a GPS receiver - that provides you with both location, obviously, and the super-accurate timing data GPS provides - probably some sort of microcontroller, whatever display you want, rather a lot of battery, and probably a solar panel or something.
gollark: Wouldn't even be too hard.
gollark: You could make a watch work anywhere on the Earth's surface.
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