Skip to main content

Architectural Heritage Committee of the Tampa Bay Chapter of the American Institute of Architects

Go Search
Home
AHC Wiki
AHC Blog
ReNew Tampa
THE AIA CENTER
  
Architectural Heritage Committee of the Tampa Bay Chapter of the American Institute of Architects > Architects of the Past  

Architects of the Past

Modify settings and columns
  
View: 
Sort by AttachmentsUse SHIFT+ENTER to open the menu (new window).
InformationFilter
DeMinices, IvoUse SHIFT+ENTER to open the menu (new window).
DeMinices
Elliot, M. LeoUse SHIFT+ENTER to open the menu (new window).
Elliot
Elliott was born in 1886 in Woodstock, New York. He attended Cooper's Institute in New York City and received training at the New York City firm of Welch, Smith & Provost. Early in his career he helped design buildings for the Jamestown Exposition of 1907 in Norfolk, Virginia. At the age of 21, he moved to Tampa and formed a partnership with Bayard C. Bonfoey. They designed the Tampa YMCA (1909), Centro Asturiano (1914) and Tampa City Hall (1915).
The partnership was dissolved in 1917 and he then created the firm of M. Leo Elliott, Inc., Architects and Engineers. Elliott then designed the Italian Club (1917) and Cuban Club (1918) in Ybor City. In 1925, the firm was doing projects all over Florida, maintaining a St. Petersburg office. Carl Atkinson Sr. was manager of St. Petersburg office during the 1920s. During the peak of the land boom, the firm employed six structural engineers, forty-six draftsmen, and seventeen site inspectors. One of the firm’s major projects in St. Petersburg includes the 1926 Ninth Street Bank and Trust designed in the Neoclassical Revival style.
Many of Elliott's notable projects in Tampa designed during this era remain on Davis Island, in downtown Tampa and Temple Terrace. Other important buildings in Tampa designed by Elliott include the Masonic Temple, the Scottish Rite Temple and the First National Bank. He also designed Sarasota High School. In 1946 the firm became Elliott & Fletcher. Elliott retired from practice in 1954 and died on August 18, 1967.
 
Fletcher, ElliotUse SHIFT+ENTER to open the menu (new window).
Fletcher
James, FredUse SHIFT+ENTER to open the menu (new window).
James
Philip KennardUse SHIFT+ENTER to open the menu (new window).
Kennard
Born in Orlando on December 29, 1890, Kennard worked as an architect with his father in the firm of Francis J. Kennard and Son located in Tampa. The firm was responsible for the design of West Coast Title Company headquarters (now the Municipal Services Building) in downtown St. Petersburg in 1926. In an article announcing the opening of the building the St. Petersburg Times noted the firm’s 35 years of experience and lauded them as "pioneer architects of the west coast of Florida."
In 1938 Philip Kennard established an independent architectural practice in downtown St. Petersburg at 302 Central Avenue. Among the projects he designed in the 1930s and 1940s are the Carleve Hotel and Nautical Apartments in downtown and the Royal Theater. During the mid-1950s he was the architect for numerous schools for Pinellas County. Among these were Northeast High School, Boca Ciega High School, 74th Street Elementary School and 16th Street Junior High School. He died in St. Petersburg on September 18, 1956 and is buried at the Royal Palm Cemetery.
 
Parslow, FredUse SHIFT+ENTER to open the menu (new window).
Parslow
Patterson, FrankUse SHIFT+ENTER to open the menu (new window).
Patterson
Rowe, H. DeanUse SHIFT+ENTER to open the menu (new window).
Rowe
Valenti, FrankUse SHIFT+ENTER to open the menu (new window).
Valenti
Wielage, RobertUse SHIFT+ENTER to open the menu (new window).
Wielage
Harry MacEwenUse SHIFT+ENTER to open the menu (new window).
Harry