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Abram Garfield

Abram Garfield (November 21, 1872 – October 16, 1958) was the youngest son of President James A. Garfield and Lucretia Rudolph Garfield, and an architect who practiced in Cleveland, Ohio.

Abram Garfield

(1872-11-21)November 21, 1872

October 16, 1958(1958-10-16) (aged 85)

Lake View Cemetery
Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.

architect

Meade & Garfield

Helen Matthews

2

an estate built in 1918 for Chester C. Bolton and Frances P. Bolton on Ocean Boulevard in Palm Beach, Florida.[6][7] After Ron Perelman sold this house and two adjoining properties to Dwight Schar in 2004 for a reported $70 million ($45 million for the house),[8] Forbes magazine described this as "the most expensive home ever sold in the U.S."[9] It was sold for $71.2 million in 2015.[10]

Casa Apava

24449 Cedar Rd. Lyndhurst, Ohio (Garfield, Abram), NRHP-listed[5]

Elizabeth B. and Dudley S. Blossom Estate Service Compound

Faxon-Thomas Mansion, now the , 10 Bluff View Ave. Chattanooga, Tennessee (Garfield, Abram), NRHP-listed[5]

Hunter Museum of American Art

7300 Center St. Mentor, Ohio (Garfield, Abram), NRHP-listed[5]

Garfield Library

24400 Cedar Rd. Beachwood, Ohio (Garfield, Abram), NRHP-listed[5]

The Hangar

The College Club of Cleveland/Alexander House, 2348 Overlook Rd., Cleveland Heights, Ohio built 1904.

Hay-McKinney and Bingham-Hanna House, now the , 10825 East Blvd. Cleveland, Ohio (Garfield, Abram), NRHP-listed[5]

Western Reserve Historical Society

Jared A. Smith House, 2541 Kenilworth Rd., Cleveland Heights, Ohio built 1898.

[11]

7645 Little Mountain Rd. Mentor, Ohio (Garfield, Abram), NRHP-listed[5]

John G. Oliver House

Leonard Hall, a dormitory at .[12] Built in 1924.

Kenyon College

at Case Western Reserve University, built 1913-1915

Mather House

US 319, 4 miles (6.4 km) southwest of Thomasville Thomasville, Georgia (Garfield, Abram), NRHP-listed[5]

Pebble Hill Plantation

W.H. Warner House. 2689 East Overlook Rd, Cleveland Heights, Ohio. Built 1898. Notable for French Chateaux-inspired Circular Staircase and ornate chimneys.

Jerome Zerbe-Samuel Halle (of ) House. 2163 Harcourt Drive, Cleveland Heights Ohio. Built 1905.

Halle Brothers Co.

A number of his works are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[5]


Garfield's works include:

Howard Babcock, , Central Press Association in Kentucky New Era, August 8, 1957, p. 18.

"Garfield's Son Recalls Tragedy"