John A. Dempwolf

John Augustus Dempwolf (1848 – December 24, 1926) was a York, Pennsylvania-based architect. He was born in Germany as the eldest of 12 brothers and sisters. Dempwolf immigrated to the United States at 19, and settled at York. He studied architecture at the Cooper Union in New York. He then worked in Boston, where he supervised construction of the Holy Cross Cathedral. He worked as an architect at Philadelphia with architect Steven Button and helped him design buildings for the Centennial Exposition. He started his own practice in 1876 at York, and was joined by his brother Rinehardt and later his son Frederick. The practice designed over 600 buildings through 1920.[1][2][3]

John A. Dempwolf
Born1848
DiedDecember 24, 1926
NationalityGermany
OccupationArchitect
BuildingsYork Central Market
ProjectsPennsylvania State Lunatic Hospital

He was made a member of the American Institute of Architects in 1901, and became a Fellow of the Institute in 1910. Dempwolf died in 1926.[4]

Selected works

Contributing buildings to the following

The York County Heritage Trust has the largest collection of the Dempwolf firm's architectural drawings.

gollark: I did say "resulting in inability to finish", though, and if a human took over after a loop happened it could be finished.
gollark: Yes, fine, no finite path.
gollark: As far as I know, there is no path resulting in inability to finish.
gollark: Basically, you're invincible in this.
gollark: NOOOOOOOO!

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.