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  2. The Office of the Supervising Architect was an agency of the United States Treasury Department that designed federal government buildings from 1852 to 1939. About. The office handled some of the most important architectural commissions of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

  3. Engraving depicting the furnishings of the Secretary of the Treasury, c.1865 Furnishing a government office building was not new to Supervising Architect Alfred B. Mullett. In 1864, while he served as the assistant to then Supervising Architect Isaiah Rogers, Mullett was charged with furnishing the Secretary of the Treasury’s offices. For this commission, Mullett hired the New York firm of ...

  4. In 1896 he joined the staff of the Office of the Supervising Architect of the United States Department of the Treasury in Washington. Then under the direction of William Martin Aiken , this office had charge of the design and construction of all federal buildings in the United States.

  5. From 1864 on the Office of the Supervising Architect handled design of federal buildings. [3] William Gibbs McAdoo, the Secretary of the Treasury from 1913 to 1918, and the Supervising Architect at the time, James A. Wetmore promoted standardization of government building design.

  6. dbo: abstract. The Office of the Supervising Architect was an agency of the United States Treasury Department that designed federal government buildings from 1852 to 1939. The office handled some of the most important architectural commissions of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

  7. Alfred Bult Mullett (April 7, 1834 – October 20, 1890) was a British-American architect who served from 1866 to 1874 as Supervising Architect, head of the agency of the United States Treasury Department that designed federal government buildings.

    • American
    • Augustine A. Mullett
    • Architect
  8. Jan 25, 2003 · Architects to the Nation: The Rise and Decline of the Supervising Architect's Office provides the first comprehensive history of the Office of the Supervising Architect, the organization that designed federal government buildings from the early 1850s to the late 1930s.

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