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American architect
Louis F. Lockwood (1864 – c. 1908) was an architect in Minnesota. Several of his works are listed on the
National Register of Historic Places.
He was a nephew of
Henry Francis Lockwood (1811–1878), English architect.
He partnered briefly in 1908 with architect
Peter Linhoff.
Works include:
-
Vienna and Earl Apartment Buildings (1907), 682-688 Holly Ave.,
St. Paul, MN (Lockwood, Louis F.), NRHP-listed
-
Kimball Prairie Village Hall (1908), Main St. and Hazel,
Kimball, MN (Lockwood, Louis), NRHP-listed
-
Robert C. Dunn House, 708 S. 4th St.,
Princeton, MN (Lockwood, Louis), NRHP-listed
- At least seven houses that are
contributing buildings in the NRHP-listed
West Summit Avenue Historic District:
- T.D. Laughlin House (1905), 1135 Summit Avenue, Classical Revival style house, and carriage house
[1]: 18
- Mrs. B. Knuppe House (1899), 1381 Summit Avenue,
American Foursquare house
[1]: 25
- Clarence H. Slocum House (1899), 1382 Summit Avenue, Craftsman style house
[1]: 25
- William David Stewart House (1907), 1410 Summit Avenue, Tudor Revival
[1]: 26
- John A. Swenson House (1900), 1411 Summit Avenue,
American Foursquare
[1]: 26–27
- Arthur W. Wallace House (1906), 1515 Summit Avenue, Classical Revival
[1]: 31
- Mrs. Francis J. Connell House (1906), 1726 Summit Avenue, Classical Revival
[1]: 38
- At least five contributing buildings in NRHP-listed
Historic Hill District:
- C.A, Bettigen House (1900), 825 Goodrich Avenue, mix of Queen Anne and medieval revival modes
[2]: 35
- Dr. L.C. Bacon House (1898), 737 Fairmount Avenue, cubiform
[2]: 37
- Skea-Skaret House (1906), 808 Fairmount Avenue, Neo-classic/Georgian
[2]: 37
- J.R. Beggs House (1907), 922 Portland Avenue, square-plan, hipped roof
[2]: 42 (perhaps American Foursquare?)
- F. Whitman House (1903), 947 Portland Avenue, "typical of the transitional phase between the
Queen Anne and the Medieval Revivals"
[2]: 42