The two dozen new buildings and major additions that Dartmouth erected at the turn of the twentieth century were designed by the New York architectural firm of Lamb & Rich and its successors.
Hanover represented only a fraction of these architects’ practice, which was centered on Manhattan and its surroundings. This project attempts to compile a monograph on the firm and a catalogue raisonné of its works from the 1870s to the 1930s, including Lorenzo B. Wheeler’s offshoots in Atlanta and elsewhere.