Barker, Burt Brown, House (Portland, Oregon)
- Title
-
Barker, Burt Brown, House (Portland, Oregon)
- LC Subject
-
Architecture, American
Architecture--United States
- Alternative
-
Burt Brown Barker House (Portland, Oregon)
- Creator
-
Lawrence and Holford
Lawrence, Ellis Fuller
Holford, William
- Creator Display
-
Lawrence & Holford (architecture firm, 1913-1928)
Ellis Fuller Lawrence (architect, 1879-1946)
William Gordon Holford (architect, 1878-1970)
Thomas Christiansen (builder/contractor)
- Description
-
This image is included in Building Oregon: Architecture of Oregon and the Pacific Northwest, a digital collection which provides documentation about the architectural heritage of the Pacific Northwest.
Ellis Lawrence Building Inventory
- Provenance
-
University of Oregon Libraries
- Temporal
-
1920-1929
- Style Period
-
Renaissance Revival
- Work Type
-
architecture (object genre)
built works
views (visual works)
exterior views
dwellings
houses
- Latitude
-
45.502305
- Longitude
-
-122.711791
- Location
-
Portland >> Multnomah County >> Oregon >> United States
Multnomah County >> Oregon >> United States
Oregon >> United States
United States
- Street Address
-
3438 Southwest Brentwood Drive
- Date
-
1929
- Identifier
-
lawrence_barkerburt.pdf
- Rights
-
In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted
- Source
-
Ellis Lawrence Building Survey. Edited by Michael Shellenbarger, Kimberly K. Lain. Oregon. State Historic Preservation Office; University of Oregon Historic Preservation Program, 1989.
- Type
-
Image
- Format
-
application/pdf
- Set
-
Building Oregon
- Primary Set
-
Building Oregon
- Institution
-
University of Oregon
- Citation
-
Guide to the Ellis Fuller Lawrence Papers , Northwest Digital Archives, http://nwda-db.wsulibs.wsu.edu/findaid/ark:/80444/xv35243
Ellis Lawrence Building Survey, https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/dspace/handle/1794/2150
- Note
-
Dr. Burt Brown Barker (1874-1969), son of Oregon pioneers, was the first vice-president of the University of Oregon. He donated to the University of Oregon the sculpture Pioneer Mother (Alexander Phimister Proctor, 1919) for which his mother posed.