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Continuation Sheet GR 2 Great River Railiroad Station

Neg. KK XXVII-14, fm. SE, showing facade under the overhang.

",' \~~ Neg. KK XXIV-11, fm. SE, view of 1900 shelter on the north side of the tracks. Continuation Sheet GR 2 Great River Railroad Shelter

Wettereau, Richard &Ziel, Ron. Victorian Railroad Stations of Long Island, 1988.

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1900 shelter

J I'I I

Above. James V.Osborne,Author:i collection

€ (page 98) looked like: for all the world a bandshell, hen Albertson I above left) could have been its clone i this April 26, 1953 photograph. The top­ heavy station, boasting no fewer than five signs indicat­ ing that it oubled as a taxi stand, w~s built in 1913,and lasted unti 1954 when it was razed and replaced with a nondescript sheher. Wave Crest (below left) was nes­ tled behind a picket fence to the left of the tiny platform shed in thi May 19, 1932 photo taken from the Beach 25th Street crossing. The station building was goneby 1939; train stopped there until 1955. Great River, ori~- v for f eight only. was called YOUPStport unhi 0

/ RAYMOND, ANTONIN 535

·r:>RKS Vancouver (major additions), British Columbia. 1901­ .;::;;){~.1730, nnenhof Palace Complex, Moscow. *1732, 1902, Cable Station, Barnfield, Vancouver Island. 1901­ ./ Third Wi rer Palace, (Leningrad). 1903, GovernmentHouse: 1903-1908, Empress Hotel; .. 1l736-174, Biron Palace, Mitau, . *1741-1744, Victoria, British Columbia. 1906-1909, Courthouse, Summer alace; 1743-1757, Voronrsov Palace; *1744­ Nelson, British Columbia. 1906-1911, Courthouse, 1750, Ani hkov Palace; Saint Petersburg (Leningrad). Vancouver, British Columbia. 19p7, Merchants' Bank l747-174 ,The Cathedral of Saint Andrew, Kiev, Rus­ (now Bank of Montreal); 1911-1915, Parliamentary sia. 1747- 752,.Summer Palace (renovation), Peterhof, Library and Government Offices; 1923-1924, Second Russia. 1 48-1755, Convent, Saint Petersburg Canadian Pacific Railway Steamship Terminal; 1923­ (Leningr ). 1749-1756, Grand Palace (renovation); 1925, Crystal Garden; Victoria, British Columbia. *1750, M n Bijou Pavilion; Tsarskoe Selo (Pushkin), Russia. 750-1754, ; 1754-1762, BIBLIOGRAPHY Fourth inter Palace; Saint Petersburg (Leningrad). LISCOMBE, RHODRI WINDSOR, and BARRETT, AN­ 1755-176 , Grotto, Tsarskoe Selo (Pushkin), Russia. THONY·A. 1979-1980 "Two Recently Discovered Drawings by F. M. Rattenbury." RACAR 6, BIBLIO RAPHY no. 2:113-115. ARKIN, AVID E. 1954 Rastrelli. Moscow. LISCOMBE, RHODRI WINDSOR, and BARRETT, AN­ DENISOV Iu. 1L 1963 Zodchii Rastrelli. St. Petersburg THONY A. n.d, "E M. Rartenbury." Forthcoming (Leni grad). publication. GRABAR' IGOR' lMMANUILOvICH 1910-1914 Vol­ SEGGER, MARTIN 1976 "The Architecture ofSamue1 umes and 4 in !storiG russkago iskusstva. Moscow: Maclure and Francis Mawson Rattenbury. In Search Kneb 1. of Appropriate Form." Canadian Collector 11:51-55. HAMILT N, GEORGE H. 1954 The Art and Architec­ ture 0 Russia. Baltimore: Penguin. Lo GAT , ETTORE 1939 Gli artisti italiana in Russia. Rom : Libreria dello Stare. RAYMOND, ANTONIN KOZ'MI N, GALINS KUZ'MINICHNA 1976 F. B. Rastre /{ St. Petersburg. Born in , near , , LUKOMS I, GEORGIO 1924-1925 "Bartolomeo Ras­ Antonin Raymond (1888-1976) graduated from trelli archirerro italiano in Russia." Architettura e the Technical College of Prague in 1910. In 1916, Arti ecoratice 4:337-358. he emigrated to the United States where he learned about the works of ADOLF Loos and . He joined Wright's in 1916. He went to with Wright in 1919 to help him in the building ofthe Imperial Horel, He was so interested in the simple and functional Born' Leeds. England, articled to Lockwood and crafts and architecture ofJapan that he decided "to Mawso ,Francis Mawson Rattenbury (1867-1935) work there; he established his own office in 1920. emigra ed to British Columbia, Canada, in 1892. He worked in Japan except for the war period. Winni g the international competition for the His prize winning work, the Reader's Digest Parlia ent Buildings (1893-1898), Victoria, Office in Tokyo (1950-1952), was far beyond the blendi g English nee-Renaissance with Richard­ Japanese level and shocked Japanese fellow archi­ sonian Romanesque, he worked extensively for the tects. He was again awarded a prize in 1964 for the provin ial government, Canadian Pacific Railway, campus of the in . His and t e Bank of Montreal, predominantly in the private residences, which show the influence of charea and Beaux-Arts styles, exemplified by the Japanese wooden structures, have been highly Empr ss Hotel, Victoria (1903-1908) and the praised. Vance ver Courthouse (1906-1911); his houses HIROSHI YAMAGUCHI were ainly Queen Anne. He returned to England in 19 0, and was murdered in Bournemouth in WORKS 1935. 1934, Saint Paul's, Karuizawa, Nagano Prefecture, R. WINDSOR LISCOMBE Japan. 1951, Antonin Raymond House; 1950-1952, Reader's Digest Office; Tokyo. 1958-1961, Gunma WO Music Center, Takasaki, Japan. 1962-1964, Nanzan 1893- 898, Parliament Buildings, Victoria, British Co­ Universiry Campus, Nagoya,Japan. 1965-1966, Shibata lumbi . 1895-1896, Courthouse, Nanaimo, British Co­ Catholic Church, Niigara Prefecture, Japan. lumbi. 1896-1897, Bank of Montreal, Government Street, Victoria, British Columbia. 1899,Bank of Mon­ BIBLIOGRAPHY treal, elson, British Columbia. *1899-1903, Patrick RAYMOND, ANTONIN (1970)1973 Antonin Raymond: . Burn Mansion, Calgary, Alberta. *1900-1903, Hotel An Autobiograpby. Rutland, Vt.: Tuttle.