Law, Law & Potter

Law, Law & Potter was an architect firm in Madison, Wisconsin; Potter Lawson, Inc. is its modern-day successor. Some of its buildings are listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places for their architecture. The firm was Madison's largest and "arguably most important" architectural firms in the 1920s and 1930s.[1]

The founding partners were brothers James R. Law III (1885-1952) and Edward J. Law (1891-1983), who were both born in Madison and graduates of the University of Pennsylvania's School of Architecture. Ellis J. Potter (1880-c.l990) joined them in 1926. Paul E. Nystrom (1899-?) joined as a draftsman and was an architect in the firm by 1931, and the firm eventually became Law, Law, Potter, & Nystrom.[1][2]

James R. Law (1855-1952) was born in Madison. He worked in the architectural office of Louis Claude and Edward Starck in 1901, and later studied at the School of Architecture of the University of Pennsylvania, and graduated in 1909. Then back in Madison he worked for architect Arthur Peabody before founding his own firm in 1914.[2]

Works include:

  • Gay Building (1913 or 1915), Madison's first skyscraper, a nine-story building (Law & Law)[1]
  • Beavers Insurance building, 119 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., Madison (Law & Law)[1]
  • Bank of Madison building, 1 West Main St., Madison (Law & Law)[1]
  • First National Bank building, 1 North Pinckney St., Madison (demolished) (Law & Law)[1]
  • Madison Masonic Temple (1915 and 1922 designs; built 1923-25), 301 Wisconsin Ave., Madison, (Law & Law), NRHP-listed[1]
  • a 1925 house in College Hills Historic District (Law, Law & Potter).[1]
  • Mount Horeb Public School (1941 addition), 207 Academy St Mount Horeb, WI (Law, Law & Porter), NRHP-listed[3][4]
  • West Side School, 718 W. Phillip St. Rhinelander, WI (Law, Law and Potter), NRHP-listed[3]
  • Lake View Sanatorium, 1204 Northport Dr., Madison (Law, Law, & Potter), NRHP-listed[3]
  • Tenney Building, Madison, NRHP-listed[2]
  • Thorstrand, Madison, NRHP-listed (Law & Law)
  • Wiedenbeck-Dobelin Warehouse, Madison, NRHP-listed (Law & Law)
  • Wisconsin Power and Light Building, Madison[2]
  • First Congregational Church, Madison[2]
  • Madison General Hospital (two wings), Madison[2]
  • West High School, Madison[2]
  • Marquette Elementary School, Madison[2]
  • Shorewood Elementary School, Madison[2]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Timothy F. Heggland (February 6, 2002). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: College Hills Historic District". National Park Service. Retrieved December 29, 2016. with eight photos
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Elizabeth L. Miller (November 15, 1994). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Longfellow School". National Park Service. p. 17. Retrieved January 21, 2017. with five photos
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 National Park Service (2010-07-09). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  4. Timothy F. Heggland (May 9, 2009). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Mount Horeb Public School / Mount Horeb High School / Mount Horeb Elementary School / Mount Horeb Primary Center". National Park Service. Retrieved December 29, 2016. with 14 photos


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