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  1. Henry Adams Building. /  43.06889°N 94.23556°W  / 43.06889; -94.23556. The Henry Adams Building, also known as the Land and Loan Office Building, is a historic building in Algona, Iowa, United States. It was designed by Louis Sullivan in 1912. Although it was not designed as a bank, and has never served as such, the building is ...

  2. Photo courtesy of Michele Curran, National Park Service. Louis H. Sullivan was one of the most influential architects in Chicago at the turn of the 20th century and one of the most prolific figures in America’s architectural legacy. He and his partner, Dankmar Adler, were leaders in the Chicago School of Architecture, an architectural trend ...

  3. The Sullivan Center, formerly known as the Carson, Pirie, Scott and Company Building or Carson, Pirie, Scott and Company Store, [4] is a commercial building at 1 South State Street at the corner of East Madison Street in Chicago, Illinois. Louis Sullivan designed it for the retail firm Schlesinger & Mayer in 1899 and later expanded it before H ...

  4. An article published in 1905: "The Home of Artist-Architect. Louis H. Sullivan's Place at Ocean Springs, Mississippi - Illustrated," by Lyndon P. Smith. Architectural Record, June 1905. Author: Lyndon P. Smith

  5. Herbert "Harry" Stack Sullivan (February 21, 1892 – January 14, 1949) was an American Neo-Freudian psychiatrist and psychoanalyst who held that "personality can never be isolated from the complex interpersonal relationships in which [a] person lives" and that " [t]he field of psychiatry is the field of interpersonal relations under any and ...

  6. Martin L. Ryerson was a wealthy Chicago lumber baron and real estate speculator. He lived from 1818 to 1887 and during his lifetime he, and his son Martin Ryerson, Jr., commissioned several Chicago works by architect Louis H. Sullivan. [1] [2] [3] The Ryerson Tomb was commissioned by Martin Ryerson, Jr. in 1887, [4] and completed by Sullivan ...

  7. 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. In 1872, at the age of sixteen, Sullivan enrolled at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to study architecture ...

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