MediaWiki API result

This is the HTML representation of the JSON format. HTML is good for debugging, but is unsuitable for application use.

Specify the format parameter to change the output format. To see the non-HTML representation of the JSON format, set format=json.

See the complete documentation, or the API help for more information.

{
    "batchcomplete": "",
    "continue": {
        "gapcontinue": "Richard_Snowden_Andrews",
        "continue": "gapcontinue||"
    },
    "warnings": {
        "main": {
            "*": "Subscribe to the mediawiki-api-announce mailing list at <https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/mediawiki-api-announce> for notice of API deprecations and breaking changes."
        },
        "revisions": {
            "*": "Because \"rvslots\" was not specified, a legacy format has been used for the output. This format is deprecated, and in the future the new format will always be used."
        }
    },
    "query": {
        "pages": {
            "1370": {
                "pageid": 1370,
                "ns": 0,
                "title": "Reasin and Wetherald",
                "revisions": [
                    {
                        "contentformat": "text/x-wiki",
                        "contentmodel": "wikitext",
                        "*": "[[William H. Reasin]] and [[Samuel Brook Wetherald (1825-1854)|Samuel Brook Wetherald]] announced the formation of their partnership on September 2, 1851.  They advertised their moved to the second floor of the ''Sun'' Iron Front Building on July 26, 1852.  Reasin maintained his own office in the ''Sun'' Building after the death of Wetherald in 1854 until his own death in 1867.\n[[File:1851 09 sun reasin wetherald ad a.jpg|left|thumb|''Baltimore Sun,'' September 2, 1851]]\n{{Firm\n|image=reasin_wetherald.jpg\n|founders=Samuel Brook Wetherald (1825-1854); William H. Reasin\n|founded_approx=No\n|dissolved_approx=No\n}}\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nThe architect [http://wiki.martenet.com/index.php/George_A._Frederick George A. Frederick], misspelling Reasin and Wetherald's names, reflected on their work in Baltimore in his 1912 [https://msa.maryland.gov/megafile/msa/speccol/sc3500/sc3520/013800/013813/pdf/recollections.pdf unpublished memoir] dictated to J. B. Noel Wyatt, who was then President of the Baltimore Chapter of the AIA:<blockquote>''<small>Rasin and Wetherall did quite a large amount of work here. Mr. Wetherall, who unfortunately died at a comparatively early age, had a distinctive individuality, and by many years anticipated the famous \"Richardson' in his pronounced preference and exemplification of the Italian (as distinguished from the more E. Byzantine of the same period),  Romanesque style of architecture. Much of Rasin and Wetheral's work shows this preferential tendency. Their principal works were the Maryland Institute and Centre Market building; the Independent or Firehouse No. 6  Fire-engine house, Gay and Ensor Streets; the old \"Bible House\",  W. Fayette,  E. of Charles Street; the Noah Walker buildings, the earliest on the S.W. corner of Baltimore and Hanover Streets, the later one on the south side of Baltimore near Calvert with an \"L\" on the latter street. The former on the third floor level contained a central niche filled by a replica of \"Crawford's Washington, (now placed in Druid Hill -Park) also the Granger building, S.W. corner of Baltimore and Sharp Streets; Excepting the fire-engine house, all of these buildings unfortunately fell as victims to the destructive fury of the great fire of 1904. The dwelling houses of Mr. Saml. Shoemaker, N. E. corner of St. Paul and Reade Streets; and that of Mr. Caughy, on W. side of St. Paul near Eager Street, also emanated in this office.</small>''\n<blockquote>\n\n\n\nEd Papenfuse, 11/5/2022\n\n\n{{NewArchitectPageFormat}}"
                    }
                ]
            },
            "1105": {
                "pageid": 1105,
                "ns": 0,
                "title": "Reuben Gladfelter",
                "revisions": [
                    {
                        "contentformat": "text/x-wiki",
                        "contentmodel": "wikitext",
                        "*": "{{Arch\n|portrait=Gladfelter_R.jpg\n|birth_date=1832\n|birth_approx=No\n|death_date=1922\n|death_approx=No\n}}\n{{Biography}}\nIn the 1912 volume of ''Men of Mark in Maryland,'' Reuben Gladfelter is described as a \u201cleading contractor and builder of the Woodberry District of Baltimore.\u201d Although not an architect in title, Gladfelter does appear to have used the architectural training he received as a young man to design and construct some of Baltimore\u2019s iconic textile mills.\n\nGladfelter came of age just as architecture was becoming a formalized profession in the United States. The American Institute of Architects formed in 1857 and its Baltimore Chapter in 1870. Also, architectural drawing was now being offered at the Maryland Institute School of Design with the idea that drawing would improve taste and judgment in architectural design.\n\nGladfelter was born in Baltimore County, where he grew up and spent much of his life. He traced his roots back to Casper Gladfelter who immigrated to the United States from Switzerland in 1747. The Gladfelter clan had a strong interest in ancestry. A book was written about the family history by one of its kin and, in 1906, the ''Baltimore Sun'' reported that 1,200 Gladfelters from across the country converged upon York, Pennsylvania for a family reunion, near the location where the late Casper settled.\n\nGladfelters\u2019 father was a mechanic and worked in a paper manufacturing plant. As a boy, Gladfelter was given odd jobs while he was not at school to instill in him a strong work ethic. He recalled that his mother would kneel by his bedside and pray that he would grow up to be a good and useful man. Gladfelter took his mother\u2019s prayers to heart, and later in life, after several attempts to attain public office, declared that his \u201conly ambition is to further the interest of the public.\u201d\n\nGladfelter studied geometry and architectural drawing at the Maryland Institute. He also took private drawing lessons from a Mr. Erhart, noted as a prominent architect and teacher of the time. After his studies he landed a job as superintendent of construction at William E. Hooper and Son, a major textile manufacturer in Woodberry. Gladfelter designed the sprawling Clipper Mill (today Whitehall Mill) after the original building burned in 1854. The mill grew with the prosperity of the company and Gladfelter designed additions along an extensive line of factory buildings hugging the Jones Falls. The new mill burned in 1865 and was quickly rebuilt. Gladfelter maintained continuity along the impressive complex by employing uniform architectural elements\u2014notably large, paired arched windows. The building also featured a wooden Italianate cupola.\n\nGladfelter would find the opportunity to truly put his architectural training to use with Meadow Mill, a showpiece that broke from the strictly functional approach of industrial architecture. Meadow Mill was built in 1877 during an economic recession. Despite the downturn, Woodberry\u2019s mills were booming and Hooper clearly wanted to show this through the construction of his new mill that would face the Northern Central Railway. The four-story mill was built to house all the necessary machinery for manufacturing seine twine. Gladfelter likely called for the Italianate lintels over the windows and the impressive central tower topped with a steepled belfry. Workers living in the newly built Brick Hill village across the railroad tracks would have heard its bells ring out. The front of the mill, facing the railroad, also featured a landscaped flower garden and walking paths, lending a pastoral feel to this site of heavy industry\n\nGladfelter is also presumed to have designed the more elaborate Gothic Revival and Italianate homes in Woodberry built as part of Hooper\u2019s mill village. The deep-set Gothic Revival duplex at 3608-3614 Clipper Road is divided by a cross gable. The South facade, which faces what is now called Shiloh United Apostolic Church, is more elaborate than the North side, featuring quoins and an elaborate roof and porch, indicating that the South building may have been built earlier, possibly at the time the church was built.\n\nAt the end of Clipper Road (3711-3713) is an Italianate duplex that looks to have been designed by someone with architectural training, likely Gladfelter. The house was built for supervisors at the mill. It features a cross gable, tripartite window in the center bay, a front porch, and scroll-sawn cornice brackets.\n\nGladfelter was a more prolific builder than designer. In 1889, he began his own construction venture with Levi Chambers and together they formed Gladfelter & Chambers, Contractors and Builders. They erected about two-hundred homes in Roland Park, including the home of William G. Nolting of prominent architecture firm Wyatt & Nolting.\n\nMuch is known about Gladfelter\u2019s personal life thanks to ''Men of Mark of Maryland'' and the extensive book documenting the Gladfelter family history. In 1853, Gladfelter married Elizabeth Jane Roles, with whom he had eleven children, a sizable addition to the already considerable extended Gladfelter family. He lived in Woodberry while working for Hooper and lived in the manor house on Rockrose Avenue that predates the mill company construction, today a nursing home. His hobbies included agriculture and horticulture, which he believed were beneficial from a physical and moral standpoint. The house was well known around the neighborhood for its many varieties of blooming flowers.\n\nGladfelter was a staunch Methodist and zealot of the Temperance Movement. Woodberry went dry in 1866 through a county ordinance and remained dry after annexation to the City through what was known as the \u201clocal option.\u201d Gladfelter was a fierce supporter of the local option. However, Gladfelter\u2019s connection to the Temperance Movement proved to be a hinderance when he tried to enter politics in Maryland\u2014the state that produced H.L. Mencken would later gain the reputation as the wettest state in the Union during Prohibition.\n\nIn 1886, Gladfelter was living at 2072 Druid Park Drive in Woodberry in a Second Empire brick duplex. The other half of the duplex was owned by his business partner, Levi Chambers. Gladfelter died in 1922, at ninety years old having had a long and successful career in the building industry.\n\nWritten and researched by Nathan Dennies, BAF Assistant Director, Greater Hampden Heritage Alliance Chair{{NewArchitectPageFormat}}\n{{DEFAULTSORT:Gladfelter}}"
                    }
                ]
            }
        }
    }
}