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Jackson C Gott
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Name
Jackson Gott
Role
Architect
Died
1909
Structures
Charles Theatre, Rombro Building, Hendler Creamery, Southern District Police St, Masonic Temple
Jackson C. Gott (1829–1909) was an American architect. Gott was born in Baltimore County, practiced in and around Baltimore all his life, and was named a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects in 1889.
Work
Buildings designed by him which survive and are listed on the National Register of Historic Places include:
Johnson Building, 26-30 S. Howard St., Baltimore, 1880
Rombro Building, 22–24 S. Howard St., Baltimore, 1881
Governor John Walter Smith House, 104 S. Church St., Snow Hill, Maryland, 1890
main building of the Hendler Creamery, 1100 E Baltimore St & 1107 E Fayette St., Baltimore, 1892
Renaissance Building, formerly the Masonic Temple, 101-107 W. Broad Street, Richmond, Virginia, constructed 1888-1893
Southern District Police Station, 28 E. Ostend St., Baltimore, 1896
One or more buildings in Union Bridge Historic District, Roughly bounded by Bellevue, E. Locust, Buttersburg Alley, Church, Whyte, W. Locust and the Western Maryland RR tracks, Union Bridge, MD
One or more buildings in Federal Hill South Historic District, Roughly bounded by Cross St., Olive St., Marshall St., Ostend St., Fort Ave. and Covington St., Baltimore
Gott's work not on the National Register includes:
the Charles Theatre, Baltimore, 1892
the Maryland Penitentiary, now the Metropolitan Transition Center, Baltimore, 1894
central section of the Worcester County Courthouse, Snow Hill, Maryland