Thomas J. Duff

Thomas J. Duff was an architect noted for his design of a number of religious buildings for the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York during its major expansion at the beginning of the 20th century.

His firm was headquartered at 407 West 14th Street, Manhattan,[1] and in Mount Vernon in Westchester County.

Buildings designed by Duff

  • Saint Malachy's Roman Catholic Church (1903) on West 49th Street in Manhattan.
  • Immaculate Conception Church (1908) in Tuckahoe[2]
  • St. Lucy's Church (1914–15) on East 104th Street in Manhattan.
  • Rectory of St. Cecilia Parish (1927) at 125 East 106th Street in Manhattan.
gollark: To be fair, people do make really weird mistakes and assumptions about computers and being able to do this stuff competently probably means you do that less.
gollark: * and
gollark: But I guess being able to model how computers work is useful for programmers since many people are so very bad at this.
gollark: I'm not sure it's actually testing things relevant to programming skill by making you effectively *be* an inefficient computer.
gollark: A "computational thinking" challenge.

References

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