Richard B. Fitzgerald - Some of The Buildings That Were Constructed With Fitzgerald Brick

Some of The Buildings That Were Constructed With Fitzgerald Brick

  • Central Prison; Raleigh (1870–1884)
  • Emmanuel AME Church; Kent Street, Durham (1888)
  • St. Joseph's AME Church (now Hayti Heritage Center); Fayetteville Street, Durham (1891)
  • Erwin Cotton Mills; West Main and Ninth streets, Durham (1892)
  • Fitzgerald Building; corner of Chapel Hill and Kent streets, Durham (1910)

Read more about this topic:  Richard B. Fitzgerald

Famous quotes containing the words buildings, constructed, fitzgerald and/or brick:

    Now, since our condition accommodates things to itself, and transforms them according to itself, we no longer know things in their reality; for nothing comes to us that is not altered and falsified by our Senses. When the compass, the square, and the rule are untrue, all the calculations drawn from them, all the buildings erected by their measure, are of necessity also defective and out of plumb. The uncertainty of our senses renders uncertain everything that they produce.
    Michel de Montaigne (1533–1592)

    Anyone who has ever constructed a “new heaven” has discovered the power to do it nowhere but in his own hell.
    Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900)

    Personality is an unbroken series of successful gestures.
    —F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896–1940)

    Sometimes among our more sophisticated, self-styled intellectuals—and I say self-styled advisedly; the real intellectual I am not sure would ever feel this way—some of them are more concerned with appearance than they are with achievement. They are more concerned with style then they are with mortar, brick and concrete. They are more concerned with trivia and the superficial than they are with the things that have really built America.
    Lyndon Baines Johnson (1908–1973)