Historical Timeline
1800
1808
George Washington Robinson is born in Providence, Rhode Island.
1811
William Hall is born in West Greenwich, Rhode Island.
1811
September 3: Ezra Blake Robinson is born in Cambridge, Mass.
1818
The New England Glass Co., founded by Deming Jarves and others.
1818
George B. Lothrop born.
Spencer Richards is awarded a patent for a process for finishing glass buttons.
1822
c. 1822
Spencer Richards works with Richard Robinson & Co., the glass button manufacturer founded by Enoch Robinson’s cousins Richard and Willard Robinson.
1824-1825
Enoch Robinson operates machine shop with his brother-in-law Willard Starkey in Attleboro, Mass.
1825
c. 1825
Enoch Robinson begins manufacturing door knobs and other hardware, independently and with Spencer Richards and others, in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
1825
Enoch Robinson begins association with the New England Glass Co.
1825
Deming Jarves leaves the New England Glass Co.; founds the Boston & Sandwich Glass Co.
1825
Henry Whitney assumes control of the New England Glass Co.
Enoch Robinson & Henry Whitney: “Making Glass Knobs for Doors”
U.S. Patent No. 4,553X
1826
Robinson & Whitney’s glass press revolutionizes flint glass manufacturing.
1828
Congress passes the Tariff Act.
Prices increase on imported goods and raw materials.
Nichols House
Boston, MA
1830
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Beacon Hill Historic District, District
Charles Bulfinch, Architect, 1804
Old State House
Boston, MA
1830
Isaiah Rogers, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Robert Twelves, Architect, 1713
Pressed Glass Whale Oil Lamp
c. 1830
Spencer Richards, Enoch Robinson
Enoch Robinson, Spencer Richards, Inventors
The New England Glass Co., Manufacturer
c. 1832
G.W. Robinson, Machinist, Ballard Place
c. 1833
Enoch Robinson joins Francis Draper, establishes Enoch Robinson & Francis Draper in Boston.
1833
G.W. Robinson, Machinist, 25 Garden.
Captain Robert Bennet Forbes House
Milton, MA
1833
Isaiah Rogers, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
1833
William Enoch Robinson is born in Cambridge, Mass.
1833
William Hall marries Elizabeth Lothrop, the sister of George B. Lothrop.
1834
G.W. Robinson, Machinist, 43 Purchase.
1835
G.W. Robinson, Machinist, North Margin.
The Hermitage
Nashville, TN
1835
Joseph Reiff & William C. Hume, Architectural Firm
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
David Morrison, Architect, 1830
Grace Church
Boston, MA
1835
William Washburn, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
c. 1835
Enoch Robinson leaves Cambridge for Boston.
Salem City Hall
Salem, MA
1838
Richard Bond, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., G.W. Robinson & Co., Manufacturers
National Theatre
Boston, MA
1836
William Washburn, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
E. Robinson, F. Draper, & J.H. Lord: “Ferrule Knob for Doors and Furniture”
U.S. Patent No. 65
1836
E. Robinson & F. Draper: “Door, Commode, &c, Knob”
U.S. Patent No. 98
1836
1836
December 15: US Patent Office fire. Around 9,957 patent records and some 7,000 models were lost.
1837
G.W. Robinson & Co., 4 Richmond Street.
Enoch, George W., and Ezra B. Robinson manufacture glass door knobs.
1837
Enoch Robinson parts ways with Francis Draper, and joins his brothers George and Ezra at G.W. Robinson & Co.
1837
“Enoch Robinson & Francis Draper” changes name to “Francis Draper.”
Boston Custom House
Boston, MA
1837–1849
Ammi Burnham Young, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
E. & G.W. Robinson: “Method of Attaching Glass Knobs to Metallic Sockets”
U.S. Patent No. 434
1837
1837
Francis (Frank) Draper Robinson is born in Boston, Mass.
1839
E. Robinson & Co. established.
1839
January 2: E. Robinson & Co., 32 Dock Square.
Cushing-Col. Benton House “Bellmont”
Belmont, MA
c. 1840–1855
Asher Benjamin, Architect
G.W. Robinson & Co., E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturers
Longfellow House - Washington’s Headquarters
Washington’s Headquarters
Cambridge, MA
1840
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
G.W. & Ezra Robinson: “Spring-Bolt for Door and Other Locks”
U.S. Patent No. 1626
1840
F. Draper: “Glass Knob for Doors, &c”
U.S. Patent No. 1784
1840
1843
William Hall leaves E. Robinson & Co.; founds Wm. Hall & Co., 27 Dock Square, Boston, Mass.
Enoch Robinson: “Improvement in the Method of Attaching Door-Knobs to Their Spindles”
U.S. Patent No. 2904
1843
Willam Hall: “Lock for Safes, Bank-Vaults, &c”
U.S. Patent No. 3221
1843
Willam Hall: “Door Lock or Latch”
U.S. Patent No. 3308
1843
1843
William Francis Hall is born in Brookline, Mass.
1844
April 15: Charles Bulfinch dies.
1846
E. Robinson & Co. moves to 4 Washington Street.
Adam’s House Hotel
Boston, MA
1846
William Washburn, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Adams Boston Directory: Robinson Steering Apparatus (Advertisement)
1846
1847
MCMA Exhibition at Faneuil and Quincy Halls, Boston. Among the exhibitors are Enoch Robinson, William Hall, and George B. Lothrop.
Northern Railway Co.
1849
Wm. Hall & Co., Manufacturer
1849
Mercury glass is patented in England by Edward Varnish and Frederick Hale Thomson of E. Varnish & Co.
1850
c. 1850-1866
George B. Lothrop works with his brother-in-law William Hall at Wm. Hall &. Co.
1850
Henry John Hall is born in Boston, Mass.
c. 1851
James R. Bugbee becomes partner in E. Robinson & Co.
American House Hotel
Boston, MA
1851
William Washburn, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Richard Henry Dana Jr. House
Cambridge, MA
1851
Charles Howland Hammatt Billings, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
James R. Bugbee, “Improved Lock and Key”
U.S. Patent 8,060
1851
1851
Russell & Erwin founded.
1851
P.F. Corbin Company founded.
1851
Crystal Palace Exhibition, London.
Massachusetts State House
Boston, MA
1853
William Washburn, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Charles Bulfinch, Architect, 1798
Fire Engine House No. 1, Roxbury
Roxbury, MA
1855
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
(Old) Tremont Temple
Boston, MA
1853
William Washburn, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
William Flagg Homer House
Belmont, MA
c. 1853
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Guyot-Horsford House
Cambridge, MA
1854
Henry Greenough, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Wm. Hall & Co., Manufacturers
c. 1855
“Francis Draper” changes name to “F. Draper & Co.”
P. Whitin & Sons, Cotton Machine Works
Whitinsville, MA
1855–1869
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
The Parker House Hotel
Boston, MA
1855
William Washburn, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Treasury Building
Washington, DC
1861–1865
Ammi Burnham Young, Alexander Hamilton Bowman, Architects
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Robert Mills, Architect, 1836
c. 1856
Frederick Gardner Hall is born in Boston, Mass.
1857
G.W. Robinson & Co. moves to 48 Richmond.
The Old South Meeting House
Boston, MA
c. 1857
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Robert Twelves, Architect, 1729
US Custom House
Wheeling, WV
1859
Ammi Burnham Young, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Vermont State House
Montpelier, VT
1859
Thomas Silloway, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
G.W. Robinson: “Steering Apparatus”
U.S. Patent No. 23,265
1859
Young’s Hotel
Boston, MA
1860
William Washburn, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Preble House Hotel
Portland, ME
1860
Alexander Parris, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Gibson House
Boston, MA
1860
Edward Clarke Cabot, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Beacon Hill Historic District, Back Bay Historic District, Districts
Samuel Ward Residence
Boston, MA
1861
Arthur Gilman, Gridley J.F. Bryant, Architects
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Arlington Street Church
Boston, MA
1861
Gridley J.F. Bryant, Arthur Gilman, Architects
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Back Bay Historic District, District
G.W. Robinson: “Steering Apparatus”
U.S. Patent No. 32,719
1861
1861
April 12: Civil War starts.
1861
June 28: Joseph Dodge Jewett is born in Lowell, Mass.
Old City Hall
Boston, MA
1862–1865
Gridley J.F. Bryant, Arthur Gilman, Architects
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Treasury Building
Washington, DC
1861–1865
Isaiah Rogers, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Robert Mills, Architect, 1836
Codman Estate
Lincoln, MA
1863–1868
John Hubbard Sturgis, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Charles Bulfinch, Architect, 1790
Willam Hall: “Improvement in Locks”
U.S. Patent No. 37,290
1863
E. Robinson & Co. Invoice, 1869
1864
1865
James R. Bugbee, partner with Enoch and William Robinson, leaves E. Robinson & Co.; E. Robinson & Co. changes name to E. Robinson & Son.
Charles William Freeland Residence
Boston, MA
1865
William Robert Ware, Henry Van Brunt, Architects
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Willam Hall: “Improvement in Locks”
U.S. Patent No. 47,817
1865
1865
Deming Jarves publishes “Reminiscences of Glass-Making.”
1865
Ammi B. Young, in his journal, writes that E. Robinson & Co. “are esteemed the best locksmiths in this country.”
1865
April 9: Civil War ends.
Old Naval Hospital
Washington, DC
1866
Ammi Burnham Young, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
1866
George B. Lothrop leaves Wm. Hall & Co.; establishes George B. Lothrop & Co., at 30 Exchange Street.
c. 1866
Bugbee & Hollis founded.
1867
E. Robinson & Co. hardware displayed in Paris at the Exposition Universelle d’Art et d’Industrie.
Temple for the Grand Lodge of Freemasons
Boston, MA
1867
E. Robinson & Co., Bugbee & Hollis, Manufacturers
c. 1868
G.W. Robinson & Co. moves to 85 Richmond.
Welch-Ross House
Cambridge, MA
1868
James R. Richards, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
New Hampshire Asylum for the Insane
Concord, NH
1868
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Elias Carter, Architect, 1842
1868
Yale & Towne, founded as Yale Lock Manufacturing Co., in Stamford, Ct.
1868
William Enoch Robinson dies in Somerville, Mass.
1868
St. John‘s Chapel
1868
June 26: Walter Clifton Vaughan is born in Portsmouth, New Hampshire.
Ames-Webster Mansion
Boston, MA
1871
Robert Swain Peabody, John Goddard Stearns, Jr., Architects
Peabody & Stearns, Architectural Firm
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Elizabeth Kendall Residence
Boston, MA
1872
William Gibbons Preston, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
1872
George Washington Robinson dies in Roxbury, Boston, Mass.
1872
November 9: Great Boston Fire.
1873
G.W. Robinson & Co. sells its buildings at North and Richmond Streets and ceases operation.
1873
E. Robinson & Co. moves to 21 Brattle Street.
Alisha Atkins Residence
Boston, MA
1873
Nathaniel Jeremiah Bradlee, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
James Case Residence
Boston, MA
1873
William Ralph Emerson, Carl R. Fehmer, Architects
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Willam Hall: “Improvement for Bolts in Safe-Doors, &c”
U.S. Patent No. 141,874
1873
Willam Hall: “Bank-Lock”
U.S. Patent No. 11,158
1874
1874
Ezra Robinson receives twelve shares in the Somerville Horse Railroad Company.
1875
1875
William Hall dies in Cohasset, Mass., leaving Wm. Hall & Co to his sons William F., Henry, and Fred.
The Church of the Advent
Boston, MA
1875–1888
John Hubbard Sturgis, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Beacon Hill Historic District, District
Francis D. Robinson: “Improvement in Latches for Doors, Etc”
U.S. Patent No. 161,705
1875
1875
July 21: Linwood Stanton Hall is born in Rockland, Maine.
1876
January 26: The Northampton National Bank Heist.
Largest bank robbery in US history; this and other robberies drives the adoption of combination time locks.
The Breakers (1878)
Newport, RI
1877–1878
Robert Swain Peabody, John Goddard Stearns, Jr., Architects
Peabody & Stearns, Architectural Firm
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Francis D. Robinson: “Improvement in Latches for Doors”
U.S. Patent No. 8,008
1877
1877
September 14: Second US Patent Office fire.
1879
Wm. Hall & Co. moves to 4 Dock Square.
Isaac Bell House
Newport, RI
1881–1883
McKim, Mead & White, Architectural Firm
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
1881
Fourteenth Exhibition of the Massachusetts Charitable Mechanics Association.
Enoch Robinson is awarded a diploma and a silver medal for door and furniture trimmings, for new designs and superior workmanship..
Arthur Astor Carey House
Cambridge, MA
1882
John Hubbard Sturgis, Charles Brigham, Architects
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
The Vale (Arthur T. Lyman Estate)
Waltham, MA
1882
Hartwell & Richardson, William Cummings Richardson, Henry Walker Hartwell, Architects
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Samuel McIntire, Architect, 1798
c. 1883
Wm. Hall opens factory at 82 Sudbury Street.
1883
John Tein Co. founded.
Somerville Fire Department
Somerville, MA
c. 1883–1890
E.K Blaikie, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Wm. Hall & Co., Manufacturers
Somerville School House
Somerville, MA
1883
E. Robinson & Co., Wm. Hall & Co., Manufacturers
1883
May 18: Walter Gropius is born.
Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller Estate
Woodstock, VT
1885
Henry Hudson Holly, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
C.C. Converse Residence
Boston, MA
1886
Francis Richmond Allen, Herbert Phipps Kenway, Architects
Allen & Kenway, Architectural Firm
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Boston Globe Building
Boston, MA
1887
Nathaniel Jeremiah Bradlee, Walter Thacher Winslow, George Homans Wetherell, Architects
Bradlee, Winslow & Wetherell, Architectural Firm
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
1888
February 11: Enoch Robinson dies; his son Albert M. Robinson takes over E. Robinson & Co.
c. 1888
E. Robinson & Co. moves to 39–41 Cornhill.
Cambridge, Massachusetts City Hall
Cambridge, MA
1888–1889
Alexander Wadsworth Longfellow Jr., Frank E. Alden, Alfred B. Harlow, Architects
Longfellow, Alden & Harlow, Architectural Firm
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Jonathan White Residence
Brookline, MA
1888
Robert Swain Peabody, John Goddard Stearns, Jr., Architects
Peabody & Stearns, Architectural Firm
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Frederick Law Olmstead, Landscape Architect
The Parker House Hotel
Boston, MA
1855
Gridley J.F. Bryant, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Polished Brass Furniture Trimmings
1888
First Church, Roxbury
Roxbury, MA
c. 1888
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
John Eliot Square District, District
William Blaney, Architect, 1804
Catalogue and Price List of Polished Brass Furniture Trimmings
1888
Sarah Orne Jewett House
South Berwick, MA
1888
Asher Benjamin, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Artistic Hardware, Manufactured by Enoch Robinson
1889
c. 1890
Joseph Jewett sets up shop at 19 Pearl Street.
Stephen Higginson Jr. House
Boston, MA
1890–1891
Ogden Codman, Jr., Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Beacon Hill Historic District, District
Charles Bulfinch, Architect, 1807
c. 1891
Walter Vaughan joins Joseph Jewett at 19 Pearl Street.
New Albany Street Railway Co.
New Albany, IN
1892
Wm. Hall & Co., Manufacturer
The Breakers
Newport, RI
1892–1895
Burditt & Williams, Hardware Supplier
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
City of Somerville
Somerville, MA
1892
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
1892
Ezra Blake Robinson dies in Somerville, Mass.
Francis D. Robinson: “Spring-Hinge”
U.S. Patent No. 503,064
1893
1893
Chicago World’s Fair; attended by Walter and Etta Vaughan on their honeymoon.
1894
George B. Lothrop dies.
1894
July 13: Walter Stafford Vaughan is born in Cambridge, Mass. to Walter Clifton Vaughan and Mosetta Isabella Stafford.
1895
Joseph D. Jewett and Walter C. Vaughan form “copartnership” under the name J.D. Jewett & Co.
1895
J.D. Jewett & Co. moves from 19 Pearl Street to 168 Washington Street, near Dock Square.
Massachusetts State House
Boston, MA
1853
Charles Brigham, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
William Washburn, Architect, 1853
Charles Bulfinch, Architect, 1798
Tremont Temple
Boston, MA
1896
Clarence Blackall, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
E. Robinson & Co. Envelope
1897
Glass Knobs
1897
Faneuil Hall
Boston, MA
1898–1899
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
John Smibert, Architect, 1742
Charles Bulfinch, Architect, 1806
Massachusetts Registry of Deeds
East Cambridge, MA
1899
Middlesex County Courthouse
Cambridge, MA
1899
Ammi Burnham Young, Architect, 1848
Charles Bulfinch, Architect, 1812
Massachusetts Historical Society
Boston, MA
1899
Edmund March Wheelwright, Architect
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
1899
Francis Draper Robinson dies in Melrose, Mass.
1900
c. 1900
E. Robinson & Co. hires L. Stanton Hall.
Colonial Door Trimmings
c. 1900
French Window Weather-Strip & Bolt
c. 1900
E. Robinson & Co. Invoice
1900
Enoch Robinson Letterhead, with Drawer Pull Design
c. 1900
County Probate Courthouse
Cambridge, MA
1901
Pope-Riddle House
Farmington, CT
1901
Theodate Pope Riddle, Architect
McKim, Mead & White, Architectural Firm
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
Horticultural Hall
Boston, MA
1901
Edmund March Wheelwright, Architect
Wheelwright & Haven, Architectural Firm
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
1902
May 29: J.D. Jewett Co., successor to J.D. Jewett & Co., is incorporated, with Joseph Jewett as president and Walter Vaughan as secretary.
The White House
Washington, DC
1902
McKim, Mead & White, Architectural Firm
E. Robinson & Co., Manufacturer
John Hoban, Architect, 1792
Benjamin Henry Latrobe, Architect, 1801
1902
Marcel Breuer is born.
1903
July 9: Fire at J.D. Jewett Co.’s store at 168 Washington Street causes several thousand dollars damage.
c. 1905
G.N. Wood & Co. founded.
1905
G.N. Wood & Co. acquires E. Robinson & Co.
1905
February 14: Albert Murray Robinson dies in Somerville, Mass.
Catalogue No. 2 - Glass Knobs
1906
c. 1907
Wm. Hall moves factory to Wollaston (Quincy), Mass.
Catalogue No. 3 - Outside Door Trimmings
1907
Supplement No. 2 - Hinge Plates
c. 1907
1907
Collapse of the Knickerbocker Trust Company of 1907; financial panic of 1907.
1908
December 31: Elmer Hale Pratt is born in Brookline, Mass.
c. 1909
Joseph Jewett and Walter Vaughan end their partnership; Walter Vaughan assumes control of the J.D. Jewett Co.
1909
October 15: The J.D. Jewett Co. is formally renamed the W.C. Vaughan Co.
East Farm (Archibald M. Brown Estate)
Stony Brook, Long Isand, NY
c. 1910
Archibald M. Brown, Architect
Wm. Hall & Co., Manufacturer
Pond Hollow Farm (Peabody Residence)
Old Westbury, Long Island, NY
c. 1910
Julian L. Peabody, Architect
Wm. Hall & Co., Manufacturer
c. 1911
L. Stanton Hall establishes L.S. Hall & Co. at 4 Alden Street.
Catalogue No. 4 - Glass Knobs
1911
Catalogue No. 5 - Outside Door Trimmings
1912
Copley Plaza Hotel
Boston, MA
1912
Henry Janeway Hardenbergh, Architect
G.N. Wood & Co., Manufacturer
Back Bay Historic District, District
Massachusetts State Armory
Wakefield, MA
1913
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
1913
Revenue Act of 1913 reduces tariff rates; removes tariffs completely from iron, steel, and other raw materials
.
1914
Fire destroys L.S. Hall & Co.’s shop at Alden Street. Loss: $10,000.
Littleholme (Harry B. Little Residence)
Concord, MA
c. 1914
Harry B. Little, Architect
Wm. Hall & Co., Manufacturer
Heublein Tower
Talcott Mountain State Park, Simsbury, CT
1914
Smith & Bassette, Architectural Firm
Wm. Hall & Co., Manufacturer
Nutley New Jersey Public Library
Nutley, NJ
c. 1914
Armstrong & DeGelleke, Architectural Firm
Wm. Hall & Co., Manufacturer
1914
World War I begins.
c. 1915
L.S. Hall & Co. acquires G.N. Wood & Co. (formerly E. Robinson & Co.).
Catalogue No. 6 - Glass Knobs
1916
Dormer House
Locust Valley, Long Island, NY
1916
Theodate Pope Riddle, Architect
Wm. Hall & Co., Manufacturer
“William Hall Company” Sweets Architectural Catalogue
1916
1916
William Francis Hall dies.
c. 1918
L.S. Hall & Co. moves to 1 & 2 Haymarket Square.
c. 1918
The W.C. Vaughan Co. acquires L.S. Hall & Co.
L. Stanton Hall stays on as shop superintendent.
1918
November 11: The W.C. Vaughan Co. moves from 168 Washington Street to L.S. Hall’s shop at Haymarket Square on Armistice Day.
c. 1918
Henry J. Hall retires from the William Hall Co.
1918-1919
Stafford Vaughan attends the Harvard Graduate Program in Architecture; earns Masters.
1918
September 12: L. Stanton Hall registers for the draft.
1918
World War I ends.
c. 1919
W.C. Vaughan acquires Wm. Hall & Co.
1919
Under George McCulloch Ross, “William Hall Company” changed name to “Ross Machine Company.”
1919-1922
Stafford Vaughan apprentices at the office of Charles Freely Loring, Jr. in Boston.
1919
January 15: The Great Molasses Flood.
The Purity Distilling Company tank explosion demolishes structures, injures 150, and kills 21.
Harmon Hinge No 806
c. 1920s
1920
Henry John Hall dies in Somerville, Mass.
1921
Ostrander & Eshleman, Inc. founded; exclusive representative of G. & R. Bricard of Paris; distributors of Yale & Towne.
1922
The factory and equipment of the Ross Machine Company at Wollaston, the former Willam Hall Co. factory, is at sold at auction.
Nebraska State Capitol
Lincoln, NE
1922–1932
Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
1922-1924
Stafford Vaughan awarded Julia Armory Appleton Fellowship in Architecture for study at the American Academy of Rome; travels in Europe.
“Colonial Forge and Foundry”
c. 1920s
1924
Walter and Etta Vaughan visit Stafford Vaughan in Rome; Walter collects medieval ironwork and hardware.
c. 1924-1933
Stafford Vaughan works for various architects in New York.
1925
1925
Frederick Gardner Hall dies in Boston, Mass.
1926
W.C. Vaughan acquires building at 3–7 Havervill, which houses its forge, foundry, manufacturing, and shipping departments.
Meadow Brook Hall
Rochester Hills, MI
1926–1929
William E. Kapp, Architect
Hinchman & Grylls, Architectural Firm
Ostrander & Eshleman, Inc., Hardware Supplier
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
The House Beautiful Building Annual
1926
c. 1926
Elmer Hale Pratt joins the Boston Architectural Club; works as draftsman for Perry, Shaw, and Hepburn.
Colonial Williamsburg
Williamsburg, VA
1927–1934
William Graves Perry, Architect
Perry, Shaw, & Hepburn, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Perry, Shaw, & Hepburn, Master Plan
St. Philip’s Episcopal Church
Charleston, SC
1927–1938
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
1929
Elmer Hale Pratt joins W.C. Vaughan as a draftsman.
The Winchester Public Library
Winchester, MA
1929–1931
Robert Coit, Architect
Kilham, Hopkins & Greeley, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Church of the Heavenly Rest
New York, NY
1929
Mayers, Murray & Phillip, Architectural Firm
Ostrander & Eshleman, Inc., Hardware Supplier
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
President’s House
Wellesley, MA
1929–1930
The Henry Ford Museum of American Innovation
(Edison Institute)
Dearborn, MI
1929–1933
Robert O. Derrick, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
1929
Wall Street crash; start of the Great Depression.
The Aldrich Yacht
c. 1930
Nelson W. Aldrich, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
New Old South Church
Boston, MA
1932
Francis Richmond Allen, Charles Collens, Architects
Allen & Collens, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Charles Amos Cummings, William Thomas Sears, Architects, 1873
Cummings & Sears, Architectural Firm, 1873
Memorial Church of Harvard University
Cambridge, MA
1932
Coolidge, Shepley, Bulfinch & Abbott, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
c. 1933-1941
Stafford Vaughan joins Ostrander & Eshleman, solidifying partnership with the W.C. Vaughan Co.
Henry Clay Frick House
New York, NY
1933–1937
John Russell Pope, Architect
Ostrander & Eshleman, Inc., Hardware Supplier
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Thomas Hastings, Architect, 1912
Watertown First Parish Church
Watertown, MA
1933–1937
J.B. Hunter, Hardware Supplier
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
All Saints Church
Worcester, MA
1934–1956
G. Adolph Johnson, Architect
Frohman, Robb, and Little, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Harrison Gray Otis House I
Boston, MA
1934
Abbott Lowell Cummings, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Beacon Hill Historic District, District
Charles Bulfinch, Architect, 1796
1934
Depth of the Great Depression.
1934
Walter Gropius flees Germany for London.
Stafford Vaughan designs W.C. Vaughan’s lever handle 637, later used on the front door of the Gropius house.
c. 1935
Corpus Christi Church
New York, NY
1936
Wilfred Edwards Anthony, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Vinton Freedley House
Pomfret, Windham County, CT
1936
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
House at Concord, Mass.
Concord, MA
1936
Derby, Barnes, and Champney, Architects, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
William K. Vanderbilt Estate
Centerport, NY
1936
Warren & Wetmore, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
US Department of the Interior
Washington, DC
1936
Waddy Butler Wood, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Rockefeller Apartments
New York, NY
1936
Wallace Kirkman Harrison, J. André Fouilhoux, Architects
Ostrander & Eshleman, Inc., Hardware Supplier
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
1936
Walter Gropius and Marcel Breuer arrive in Cambridge, Mass. at the invitation of Joseph Hudnut, Dean of the Harvard Graduate School of Design.
Under Elmer Pratt’s direction, W.C. Vaughan Co. introduces Lucite door pulls.
c. 1937
Saint Mary’s Episcopal Church
Washington, DC
c. 1937
James Renwick, Jr., Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Grace Church
New York, NY
c. 1937
James Renwick, Jr., Renwick, Aspinwall & Russell, Architects
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Boston College
Boston, MA
1937
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Kassler House
Princeton, NJ
1937
Kenneth Kassler, Architect
Ostrander & Eshleman, Inc., Hardware Supplier
Dillaway-Thomas House
Roxbury, MA
c. 1937
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
John Eliot Square District, District
Nathaniel Saltonstall House
Medfield, MA
1937
Nathaniel Saltonstall, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
1937
June 29: L. Stanton Hall dies.
Mr. & Mrs. G. Holmes Perkins House
Brookline, MA
1938–1939
George Holmes Perkins, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Exmoor Farm Renovation
Weston, MA
1938
Eleanor Raymond, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Eliot Congregational Church
Roxbury, MA
1938
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
The Griffen House
Scarsdale, NY
1938
Pillsbury Summer House
Duxbury, MA
1938
Eleanor Raymond, Sarah Pillsbury Harkness, Architects
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
The Gropius House
Lincoln, MA
1938
Walter Gropius, Marcel Breuer, Architects
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Christ Church Cranbrook
Bloomfield, MI
1938
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Eliel Saarinen, Master Plan
Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue, Architect, 1925
Trinity Church
Newton, MA
1938
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
George W. Chickering, Architect, 1915
William P. Bartel House
Wayland, MA
1938
Eleanor Raymond, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Breuer House, Lincoln
Lincoln, MA
1938–1939
Marcel Breuer, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
W.C. Vaughan provides hardware for Life Magazine’s “Life Houses.”
1938
Josephine M. Hagerty House
Cohasset, MA
1938–1939
Marcel Breuer, Walter Gropius, Architects
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
St. Josephs Church
1938
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Wye House
Tunis Mills, Talbot County, MD
1938–1939
Robert Key, Builder
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Robert Key, Architect, 1784
Gardner-White-Pingree House
Salem, MA
c. 1938
Samuel McIntire, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Samuel McIntire, Architect, 1804
The Ritz-Carlton Hotel
Boston, MA
1938
George Holmes Perkins, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Strickland, Blodgett & Law, Architectural Firm, 1927
1939
W.C. Vaughan acquires the John Tein Co.
Saint Anthony’s Church
1939
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Terzaghi House
Winchester, MA
1940–1941
George Holmes Perkins, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
George Nelson House
Scarsdale, NY
1939
Fordyce & Hamby, George Nelson, Architects
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Fischer House & Studio
Wrightstown Township, Bucks County, PA
1939
Marcel Breuer, Walter Gropius, Architects
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Life Magazine’s Life Houses
Queens, NY
1939
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
St. Michael’s Church
Litchfield, CT
1939
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Salem Maritime National Historic Site
Salem, MA
1939–1941
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Gov. Gore Mansion
Waltham, WA
c. 1939
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Jacques-Guillaume Legrand, Rebecca Gore, Architects, 1804
Pennsylvania State Exhibition
New York, NY
1939
Marcel Breuer, Walter Gropius, Architects
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Centenary Church
Winston Salem, NC
1939
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church
New York, NY
1939
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Ford House
Lincoln, MA
1939
Marcel Breuer, Walter Gropius, Architects
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Argentinian Pavilion
New York, NY
1939–1940
Armando D’ans, Aymar Embury II, Architects
Ostrander & Eshleman, Inc., Hardware Supplier
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
1939
New York World’s Fair, the “World of Tomorrow”; W.C. Vaughan supplies hardware for exhibitions including the Argentine Pavilion and Gropius and Breuer’s Pennsylvania State Exhibition.
1939
World War II begins.
Massachusetts General Hospital Chapel
Boston, MA
1939
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer, 1939
Higginson House
Lincoln, MA
1940
Julian Ingersoll Chamberlain, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Colonial Hand-Forged, Wrought Iron Hardware
c. 1940
Peabody Plywood House
Dover, MA
1940
Eleanor Raymond, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Wrought Iron Hardware
c. 1940s
Edward Steichen Residence
West Redding, CT
1940
Almos Evans, Frederick James Woodbridge, Architects
Evans, Moore & Woodbridge, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
University Hall & Nine Dormitories
Providence, RI
c. 1940–1950
Perry, Shaw, & Hepburn, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Alan IW Frank House
Pittsburgh, PA
1940
Walter Gropius, Marcel Breuer, Architects
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
1940
February 20: Joseph Dodge Jewett dies in Boston, Mass.
1940-1941
Plastics, 1940
Exhibition organized by Robert Woods Kennedy at the Boston Institute of Modern Art
c. 1941
Stafford Vaughan leaves Ostrander & Eshleman, joins the W.C. Vaughan Co.
Chamberlain Cottage
Wayland, MA
1941
Marcel Breuer, Walter Gropius, Architects
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
9 Ash Street House
Cambridge, MA
1941–1942
Philip Cortelyou Johnson, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Jackson House
Dover, MA
1941
Elliot Noyes, Architect
George Holmes Perkins, Supervising Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Weizenblatt House
Asheville, NC
1941
Marcel Breuer, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Abele House
Framingham, MA
1941
Walter Gropius, Marcel Breuer, Architects
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Nelson Rockefeller Apartment
New York, NY
1941
Wallace Kirkman Harrison, Architect
Jean-Michel Frank, Interior Design
Ostrander & Eshleman, Inc., Hardware Supplier
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
John Peabody Monks House
Lincoln, MA
1941
George Holmes Perkins, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Church of the Redeemer
Brookline, MA
1941
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
c. 1941
Elmer Pratt joins the Massachusetts State Guard.
1941
The US enters World War II.
c. 1942
Elmer Pratt draws illustrations for a series of books about military weapons.
1944
Walter Vaughan retires; divides shares in W.C. Vaughan between Stafford Vaughan and Elmer Pratt.
1944
Stafford Vaughan becomes president of W.C. Vaughan.
Farnsworth House
Plano, IL
1945–1951
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Architect
Ostrander & Eshleman, Inc., Hardware Supplier
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Copley Plaza Hotel
Boston, MA
1912
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Henry Janeway Hardenbergh, Architect, 1912
G.N. Wood & Co., Manufacturer, 1912
Back Bay Historic District, District, 1912
Geller House I
Lawrence, NY
1945–1946
Marcel Breuer, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
1945
September 2: World War II ends.
1945
Walter Gropius forms TAC (The Architects Collaborative) with Norman Fletcher, John Harkness, and others.
González–Álvarez House
St. Augustine, FL
1946–1955
Stuart Moffett Barnette, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
St. Augustine Town Plan Historic District, District
First Church Christ Scientist
Winchester, MA
1946
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Kaminski House Museum
Georgetown, SC
1946–1949
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Cronk Chapel
1946
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Gilbert Tompkins House
Hewlett Harbor, NY
1946
Marcel Breuer, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
St. Joseph
Dover, NH
1946–1948
James O’Shaughnessy, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Shurcliff House
Ipswich, MA
1947
Old Wye Church
Wye Mills, MD
1947–1949
William Graves Perry, Architect
Perry, Shaw, & Hepburn, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
William Elbert, Builder, 1721
The Glass House
New Canaan, CT
1947–1949
Philip Cortelyou Johnson, Architect
Ostrander & Eshleman, Inc., Hardware Supplier
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
The Thomas Crane Public Library
Quincy, MA
1947
Coletti Brothers (Paul A. and Carroll Coletti), Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Henry Hobson Richardson, Architect, 1882
Fischer Guest Cottage
Newtown, PA
1948
Marcel Breuer, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Gloucester House
New York, NY
1948
Francis X. Keally, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Kepes Cottage
Wellfleet, MA
1948–1949
Marcel Breuer, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Robinson House
Williamstown, MA
1948
Marcel Breuer, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
First Lutheran Church
Gardner, MA
1947–1948
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Breuer House I
New Canaan, CT
1948
Marcel Breuer, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Breuer Cottage
Wellfleet, MA
1948–1949
Marcel Breuer, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Hugh Stubbins House
Cambridge, MA
c. 1948
Hugh Asher Stubbins, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Whitney Allen House (Garden)
1948
St. Andrews Episcopal Church
Wellesley, MA
1949
Nathaniel Saltonstall, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Thomas Hastings, Architect, 1918
St. Thomas Church
Hartford, CT
1949
Edward F. Allodi, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Maude French House
Hanover, NH
1949
E.H. and M.K. Hunter, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Saugus Iron Works National Historic Site
Saugus, MA
c. 1949–1953
William Graves Perry, Architect
Perry, Shaw, & Hepburn, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Talbot House
Hingham, MA
1949–1956
Robert Woods Kennedy, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Six Moon Hill
Lexington, MA
1949–1950
The Architects Collaborative (TAC), Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Mayo Hill Colony Club
Wellfleet, MA
1949
Nathaniel Saltonstall, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Wellesley Veterans Housing
Wellesley, MA
1949–1952
Hugh Asher Stubbins, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Thompson House
Ligonier, PA
1949
Marcel Breuer, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Kniffin House
New Canaan, CT
1949
Marcel Breuer, Elliot Noyes, Architects
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
House in the Museum Garden
Pocantico Hills, NY
1949–1950
Marcel Breuer, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Scott House
Dennis, MA
1949
Marcel Breuer, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Clarence Howlett House
Belmont, MA
1949–1950
The Architects Collaborative (TAC), Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
The Blanchette Ferry Hooker Rockefeller Guest House
New York, NY
1949–1950
Philip Cortelyou Johnson, Landis Gores, Frederick C. Genz, Architects
Ostrander & Eshleman, Inc., Hardware Supplier
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Our Lady of Mercy Seminary
Lenox, MA
1949
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
1950
Zimmerman House
Manchester, NH
1950
Frank Lloyd Wright, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Dewey House
Hanover, NH
c. 1950
E.H. and M.K. Hunter, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Vaughan Hardware, Catalog No. 26
c. 1950
Smith House
Aspen, CO
1950
Marcel Breuer, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Menil House
Houston, TX
1950–1951
Philip Cortelyou Johnson, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Lauck House
Princeton, NJ
1950
Marcel Breuer, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Mr. & Mrs. Paul W. Bartel Residence
1950
Nelson W. Aldrich, Architect
Campbell & Aldrich, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Causy House
Wakefield, RI
1950
Hugh Asher Stubbins, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
1951
W.C. Vaughan loses 1 Haymarket Square to eminent domain; moves to 32–36 Pitts Street.
Five Fields
Lexington, MA
1951–1957
The Architects Collaborative (TAC), Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Wolfson House
Salt Point, NY
1951
Marcel Breuer, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Pack House
Scarsdale, NY
1951
Marcel Breuer, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Edward E. Mills House
New Canaan, CT
1948
Marcel Breuer, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Winterthur Museum
New Castle, DE
c. 1920–1960
Henry Francis DuPont, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
St. Mary’s - The Morning Star Church
Pittsfield, MA
1952
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
The Fernandez-Llambias House
St. Augustine, FL
1952–1954
Stuart Moffett Barnette, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
St. Augustine Town Plan Historic District, District
St. Joseph’s Cathedral
1952
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
1717 Meeting House
West Barnstable, MA
1952–1958
E.B. Goodell, Jr, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
West Barnstable Village–Meetinghouse Way Historic District, District
General Dwight D. Eisenhower Farmstead
Cumberland Township, Adams County, PA
1953–1955
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
First Parish Church
Taunton, MA
1953
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
P.M. Herzog House
Boston, MA
1953
Huson Jackson, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Cathedral Church of St. John
Wilmington, DE
1953
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
James E. Lowe & Sons, Engineer
St. George’s Episcopal Church
Schenectady, NY
1953
Samuel Fuller, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Trinity Episcopal Church Chapel
Wilmington, DE
1953
Victorine du Pont Homsey & Samuel Homsey, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Trinity Church
Upperville, VA
1954–1960
H. Page Cross, Architect
Ostrander & Eshleman, Inc., Hardware Supplier
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
John Whipple House
Ipswich, MA
1954
William Graves Perry, Architect
Perry, Shaw, & Hepburn, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
President’s House
Haverhill, MA
1954
Eleanor Raymond, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
St. Brigid’s Church
West Hartford, CT
1954
Curtin & Riley, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
St. Andrews Church
Wellesley, MA
1954
William Graves Perry, Architect
Perry, Shaw, & Hepburn, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
St. Andrews Episcopal Church
Wellesley, MA
1949
William Graves Perry, Architect
Perry, Shaw, & Hepburn, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Thomas Hastings, Architect, 1918
Nathaniel Saltonstall, Architect, 1949
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer, 1949
Tyron Palace (Governor’s House)
New Bern, NC
1954–1956
William Graves Perry, Architect
Perry, Shaw, & Hepburn, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
First Lutheran Church
Boston, MA
1954–1957
Pietro Belluschi, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Scott Residence
Wellfleet, MA
1954
Serge Chermayeff, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Gagarin House
Litchfield, CT
1954–1956
Marcel Breuer, Herbert Beckhard, Architects
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
J. Gordon Gibbs House
Marion, MA
c. 1954
George W.W. Brewster, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Trinity Church
Upperville, VA
1954–1960
H. Page Cross, Architect
Ostrander & Eshleman, Inc., Hardware Supplier
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Edward E. Mills House
New Canaan, CT
1948
Marcel Breuer, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Impco Yacht
1954
Royal Barry Wills, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Brandeis University Chapels
Waltham, MA
1954–1963
Christ Church
St. Simons Island, GA
1955
Abreu & Robeson, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Rare Books Library, Chapel, New Dormitories
Cambridge, MA
c. 1941–1969
Perry, Shaw, & Hepburn, Architectural Firm, 1941
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer, 1941
Bowditch House
Cambridge, MA
1955
Eleanor Raymond, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Nathaniel Russell House
Charleston, SC
c. 1955
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
First Parish Meetinghouse
Cohasset, MA
c. 1955–1970
E.B. Goodell, Jr, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
West Barnstable Village–Meetinghouse Way Historic District, District
Boston College
Boston, MA
1937
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer, 1937
Catalog 34R: Vaughan Clearview
c. 1950s
West Barnstable Meeting House
Barnstable, MA
1955
E.B. Goodell, Jr, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Harvard Business School
Cambridge, MA
1955
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Radcliffe College
Cambridge, MA
1955–1956
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Holy Trinity Lutheran Church
Hickory, NC
1955–1957
Robert Clemmer, Architect
Clemmer Bush Sills and Abernathy, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Mosley House
1955
The Architects Collaborative (TAC), Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
United Church
Walpole, MA
1955–1956
William Graves Perry, Architect
Perry, Shaw, & Hepburn, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Catalog 45: Emergency Exit Lock
c. 1950s
Bernard Grossman Residence
West Newton, MA
1956
Royal Barry Wills, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Westwood Parish Hall
1956
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Cargill House
1956
William R. Cargill House
Nashua, NH
1956
Royal Barry Wills, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Nordblom Residence
Concord, MA
1956
Royal Barry Wills, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
1957
The Boston Redevelopment Authority forces W.C. Vaughan’s move from Pitts Street to 77 Washington Street North.
Wye Parish House
Wye Mills, MD
1957
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Richard A. Buck House
Manchester, MA
c. 1957
George W.W. Brewster, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Boston Medical Library
Boston, MA
1957
Coolidge, Shepley, Bulfinch & Abbott, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Museum of Fine Arts
Boston, MA
1957–1965
Guy Lowell, Architect, 1957
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer, 1928
Alan C. Bemis Residence
Williamstown, MA
1958
Robert Woods Kennedy, Architect
Pietro Belluschi, Consulting Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Monsanto House of the Future
Disneyland, Anaheim, CA
1957
Richard Hamilton, Marvin Goody, Architects
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Lockwood Hardware Manufacturing Co., Manufacturers
Albert G.H. Dietz, Engineer
Residence, Royal Danish Embassy
Washington, DC
1958–1960
Vilhelm Lauritzen, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Hornbeck Residence
Chatham, MA
1958
Royal Barry Wills, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Hooper House II
Baltimore, MD
1958–1959
Marcel Breuer, Herbert Beckhard, Architects
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Chermayeff Cottage & Studio
Wellfleet, MA
1958
Serge Chermayeff, Architect, 1954
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer, 1954
Sewell J. Shuger House
Pikesville, MD
1959
Royal Barry Wills, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Daniel W. Coakley Jr. Residence
Marion, MA
1959
Royal Barry Wills, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Celanese House
New Canaan, CT
1959
Edward Durell Stone, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Adelynrood
Byfield, MA
1959
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Murchison House
Provincetown, MA
1959
The Architects Collaborative (TAC), Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Revere Pentecostal Church
Revere, MA
1959
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Lincoln Parsonage
Lincoln, MA
1959
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Royal Danish Embassy
Washington, DC
1958–1960
Vilhelm Lauritzen, Architect
The Architects Collaborative (TAC), Consulting Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Church in Winston Salem
Winstom Salem, NC
1960
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Church of Advent
Medfield, MA
1960
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Samuel & Minette Kuhn House
Wellfleet, MA
1960
Nathaniel Saltonstall, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Vaughan Hardware
c. 1960s
Social Science Building
Waltham, MA
1961
The Architects Collaborative (TAC), Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Pilgram Congregational Church
Lexington, MA
1961
Royal Barry Wills, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Embassy of the United States
Athens, Greece
1961
Walter Gropius, Pericles A. Sakellarios, H. Morse Payne, Jr, Architects
The Architects Collaborative (TAC), Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Maynard Ford House
Fitchburg, MA
1961
George W.W. Brewster, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Ilse Bischoft Residence
Hartland, VT
1961
Royal Barry Wills, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Edmund F. Wakelin Residence
Cape Elizabeth, Maine
1961
Royal Barry Wills, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Lutheran Church of the Newtons
Newton, MA
1961
Nathaniel Saltonstall, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Benjamin Thompson House
Lexington, MA
1961
Benjamin Thompson, Architect
The Architects Collaborative (TAC), Architectural Firm
Lutheran Home of Moorestown
Moorestown, NJ
1961
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Christ Church
Hamilton, MA
1961
Philip Horton Smith, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Company
Boston, MA
1961
The Architects Collaborative (TAC), Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Wallace Murray Residence
Dedham, MA
1961
Royal Barry Wills, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Dwight C. Arnold Residence
Wellesley, MA
1961
Royal Barry Wills, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Phillips Academy
Andover, MA
1961
The Architects Collaborative (TAC), Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
King’s Chapel
Boston, MA
1961–1964
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Peter Harrison, Architect, 1749
Ephrata Cloister
Ephrata, PA
1962
John Kleppinger Heyl, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Cathedral Church of St. Paul
Boston, MA
1962
Ostrander & Eshleman, Inc., Hardware Supplier
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Catholic Guild for The Blind
1962
Ostrander & Eshleman, Inc., Hardware Supplier
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
MIT Earth Science Building
Cambridge, MA
1962
Araldo Cossutta, I.M. Pei, Architects
Pietro Belluschi, Consulting Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
First Parish Church
Lincoln, MA
1962
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Chermayeff Courtyard House
New Haven, CT
1962
Serge Chermayeff, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Holy Trinity Episcopal Church
New York, NY
1962
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Trinity Episcopal Church
Concord, MA
1962
Anderson, Beckwith and Haible, Architectural Firm
Ostrander & Eshleman, Inc., Hardware Supplier
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Sons of Mary
Framingham, MA
1962
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
New England States Exhibit
New York, NY
1962
Nelson W. Aldrich, Architect
Campbell & Aldrich, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Corliss-Carrington House
Providence, RI
1962
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Joseph M. Edinburg House
Brookline, MA
1961–1962
Nathaniel Saltonstall, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Nathaniel Saltonstall, Peter Morton, Architects, 1961
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer, 1961
First Baptist Church
Greensboro, NC
1963
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Chase House (Strawbery Banke)
Portsmouth, NH
c. 1963
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Strawbery Banke, District
Presbyterian Church of the Convenant
Greensboro, NC
1963
Harry Barton, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Governor Goodwin Mansion
Chase House
Portsmouth, NH
c. 1963–1965
William Graves Perry, Architect
Perry, Shaw, & Hepburn, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Strawbery Banke, District
Centenary Methodist Church
Richmond, VA
1963
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Hardware for Church
New York, NY
1963
Ostrander & Eshleman, Inc., Hardware Supplier
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
St. Columban Parish
Arlington, VT
1963
Dirsa Lampron, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
1964
Stafford Vaughan retires; Elmer Pratt becomes president of W.C. Vaughan.
Pierre S. du Pont IV House
Wilmington, DE
1964
Ike W. Colburn, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
First Parish Church
Sudbury, MA
1964
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
St. Stephen’s Church
New York, NY
1964
Ostrander & Eshleman, Inc., Hardware Supplier
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
People’s Methodist Church
Bradford, MA
1964
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
1965
W.C. Vaughan hires Glenn Pratt.
St. John’s Chapel
New York, NY
1965
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Duke University Divinity School
Durham, NC
1965
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
National Shrine of Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton
Emmitsburg, MD
c. 1965
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
David Rockefeller House
St. Barthelemy, French West Indies
c. 1965
Nelson W. Aldrich, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
St. Peter’s Church
Manset, MA
1965
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
St. Angela Merici Church
Metaire, LA
1965
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
First Methodist Church
Pearisburg, VA
1965
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
St. Matthew’s German Evangelical Lutheran Church
Charleston, SC
1965–1966
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
1966
Edward R. Butler Co. founded by Edwards Butler.
Cranwell School Chapel
Lenox, MA
1966
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
"Smoke Screen Doors Hinged to Pocket"
1966
Trinity Church
Boston, MA
1967
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Back Bay Historic District, District
Henry Hobson Richardson, Architect, 1877
Old Governor’s Mansion
Milledgeville, GA
1967
Charles B. Cluskey, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
St. Richard’s Church
1967
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
1967
January 3: Walter Stafford Vaughan dies in Monterey, California.
Heritage Plantation of Sandwich
Sandwich, MA
1968–1971
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
John Wright Stanly House
New Bern, NC
1968
John Hawks, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
c. 1969
Glen Pratt becomes Vice President of W.C. Vaughan.
1969
Walter Gropius dies.
Catalog No. 72: Classic Sample Collections
c. 1970s
Catalog No. 64R
c. 1970
Vaughan Hardware
List Price Book No. 1
c. 1970
Vaughan Clearview
Price Sheet #1 Applying to Catalog #34R
1970
Emergency Exit Lock #1636
1970
Cover Letter
1970
Marblehead Church
Marblehead, MA
1971
Carpenter Associates, Architectural Firm
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
Port Tobacco Court House
Port Tobacco, ML
1971
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
1972
Glen Pratt leaves W.C. Vaughan.
Clark Art Institute
Williamstown, MA
1972
Pietro Belluschi, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
First Church Congregational
Boxford, MA
1972
Merton Stuart Barrows, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
1975
Vaughan Hardware
Classic Collections
c. 1970s
First Church and Parish
Dedham, MA
1975
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
1979
Elmer Pratt retires.
The Hebrew College
Brookline, MA
c. 1980
Andrea Leers Browning, Architect
The W.C. Vaughan Co., Manufacturer
1981
Redstone Modern acquires the W.C. Vaughan Co.
1981
Marcel Breuer dies.
1986
Elmer Hale Pratt dies in Cohasset, MA.
1987
Elmer Pratt’s nephew Glenn Albert Pratt, former vice president of W.C. Vaughan, purchases the company from Redstone Modern and re-establishes the business in Braintree, Mass.
1992
E.R. Butler & Co. acquires Ostrander & Eshleman.
Scripps Neurosciences Research Institute
San Diego, CA
1992–1995
Tod Williams Billie Tsien, Architectural Firm
E.R. Butler & Co., Manufacturer
1993
E.R. Butler & Co. receives award form the American Institute of Architects (San Diego Chapter) for the Neurosciences Institute at the Scripps Research Institute, “in recognition of the outstanding contribution in design.”
1995
TAC ceases operation.
Central Synagogue
New York, NY
1998–2001
Henry Fernbach, Architect
E.R. Butler & Co., Manufacturer
1999
E.R. Butler & Co. acquires the Quincy Manufacturing Co.
Hermès International S.A.
New York, NY
1999–2007
Beyer, Blinder, Belle, Architectural Firm
E.R. Butler & Co., Manufacturer
McKim, Mead & White, Architectural Firm, 1927
Beyer, Blinder, Belle, Architectural Firm, 1984
Tweed Courthouse
New York, NY
1999–2001
John G. Waite Associates, Architectural Firm
E.R. Butler & Co., Manufacturer
John Kellum, Architect, 1861
Leopold Eidlitz, Architect, 1871
2000
Gracie Mansion
New York, NY
2002
Jamie Drake, Architect
E.R. Butler & Co., Manufacturer
Harrison Gray Otis House II
Boston, MA
2011
E.R. Butler & Co., Manufacturer
Beacon Hill Historic District, District
Charles Bulfinch, Architect, 1802
George W. Bush Library
University Park, TX
2012
Robert A.M. Stern, Architectural Firm
E.R. Butler & Co., Manufacturer
2012
May 7: Rhett Butler, of E.R. Butler & Co., receives the Arthur Ross Award for Artisanship from the Institute for Classical Architecture & Art.
Astor Beechwood Mansion
Newport, RI
2016
John Grosvenor, Architect
E.R. Butler & Co., Manufacturer
Richard Morris Hunt, Architect, 1881
Downing & Vaux, Architectural Firm, 1852
McKim, Mead & White, Architectural Firm, 1901