Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Warren Heywood Williams

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
American

Died
  
January 1888

Role
  
Architect

Name
  
Warren Williams

Occupation
  
Architect


Warren Heywood Williams PCAD Warren Heywood Williams

Born
  
1844
New York, New York

Practice
  
Warren Heywood Williams & Justus Krumbein; Warren Heywood Williams & E.M. Burton

Structures
  
Calvary Presbyterian Church, Morris Marks House, Merchant Hotel, Grand Stable and Carriage, Deady and Villard Halls - Uni

Warren Heywood Williams (1844 in New York City – January 1888) was an American architect, who spent most of his career working in the U.S. state of Oregon. Starting in 1860, he apprenticed in San Francisco as a draftsman at the architectural firm of his father, Stephen H. Williams, and Henry W. Cleaveland. Warren Heywood Williams and his wife, Christina (c. 1847–1929), had two sons who became architects, Warren Franklin Williams (d. 1917) and David Lochead Williams (b. 09/02/1866).

Warren Heywood Williams Warren Heywood Williams Wikiwand

Williams worked as an architect from 1869 to 1887. His first such work was with his father, in the firm then named S.H. Williams & Son, while the elder and younger Williams were both living in San Francisco. In January 1873, Warren Williams moved with his wife and three children to Portland, Oregon. From then until mid-1874, he was partners in an architecture firm with E.M. Burton. Subsequently, Williams partnered with Justus Krumbein from 1875 to 1878. Williams was an architect of cast-iron buildings in the United States and Canada.

Williams died of pneumonia in January 1888.

References

Warren Heywood Williams Wikipedia