• Home
  • About
  • Programs
  • Events
  • Publications
  • Resources

Baltimore Architecture Foundation

The Center for Baltimoreans who care about Architecture

Feed on
Posts
Comments

Otto G. Simonson

Oct 18th, 2007 by admin

Born in Dresden, Germany, Otto G. Simonson was educated in public and private schools and at the Polytechnic Institute of Germany. He emigrated to Hartford, Connecticut, at age 21. He entered the office of supervising architect of U.S. Treasury Department in the early 1880s. He became senior draftsman in that office, but he resigned at the outbreak of the Spanish-American War so that he could serve in the Army as senior captain of Company F, District of Columbia Volunteers. After the war, he returned to the Treasury Department and was appointed superintendent of construction of public buildings. In 1904, Simonson was assigned the task of superintending the work on the new U.S. Custom House in Baltimore (Hornblower & Marshall, architects). The following year, Simonson entered partnership with Theodore Wells Pietsch. The firm of Simonson & Pietsch lasted until about 1908.

Comments are closed.

  • NEXT EVENTS

    Panel Discussion &
    Public Forum
    University of Baltimore Law School
    Design Competition



    U of Baltimore
    Student Center (5th Floor Recital Hall)

    January 8, 2009
    6:30 PM

    2009 Groundhog Day Party



    Gaslight Square
    January 31, 2009
    7:00-???

  • Key Pages

    • About
      • Contact
      • Membership
    • Events
      • Architectural Tours
      • Forum Series :: Fall 2008
      • Groundhog Day
      • Lectures
    • Programs
      • City Sand
      • Dead Architects Society
      • Golden Griffin
      • Kids in Design
      • Tinkertoy Competition
    • Publications
    • Resources
    • Links
  • Header Image Data

    Subject: A.S. Abell Building, with Bromo-Seltzer Tower
    Photographer: Louise Taft
    Date: September 1985
    Digital ID: md1149
  • Meta

    • Log in
    • Entries RSS
    • Comments RSS
    • WordPress.org

Baltimore Architecture Foundation © 2009 All Rights Reserved.

MistyLook made free by Web Hosting Bluebook