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  1. Louis Henry Sullivan (September 3, 1856 – April 14, 1924) [1] was an American architect, and has been called a "father of skyscrapers" [2] and "father of modernism." [3] .

    • National Farmers' Bank. Carl Bennett was the first banker to commission Sullivan to design a new building for National Farmers’ Bank in Owatonna, Minnesota, a farming town on the state’s southeastern prairie.
    • Van Allen Department Store. Articles about the bank circulated in financial and design journals alike, each applauding Bennett and Sullivan for their collaboration and innovation.
    • Merchants' National Bank. At the same time Clinton was celebrating its new department store, the town of Grinnell, Iowa, celebrated its new jewel box, Merchants’ National Bank.
    • Peoples' Savings and Loan Association. Sullivan’s acclaim spread beyond the prairies of Minnesota and Iowa as well. In 1917, he designed the new building for Peoples’ Federal Savings & Loan Association in Sidney, Ohio.
  2. May 14, 1989 · Ginger Sullivan, his wife of 33 years, says that she often arrives separately when they attend medical meetings together, and that even in a room of 500 people, "if I step inside the door, I...

  3. As an architect, critic and mentor, Louis H. Sullivan had an impact on architecture that extends well beyond his work in Chicago. From the globally recognized phrase “form ever follows function” to the mentorship of a young Frank Lloyd Wright, Sullivan’s influence set in motion some of the most important ideas in modern architecture.

  4. Louis Sullivan Collection. Louis H. Sullivan was born in Boston, Massachusetts, on September 3, 1856. His formal education was erratic, but its scope and variety laid the foundation for Sullivan’s monumental presence on the American urban landscape.

  5. Sep 20, 2004 · Born in Atlanta on November 3, 1933, Louis Wade Sullivan was the second of two sons born to Lubirda and Walter Sullivan. Most of Sullivan’s childhood was spent in Blakely, where his father moved the family in 1937 to open Early County ’s first, and only, Black funeral parlor.

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  7. Louis Wade Sullivan (born November 3, 1933) is an active health policy leader, minority health advocate, author, physician, and educator. He served as the Secretary of the United States Department of Health and Human Services during President George H. W. Bush 's Administration and was Founding Dean of the Morehouse School of Medicine .

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