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Home > Quarry Articles, Links and Books > Stone Magazine - List of Articles Beginning with the 1895 issue > Stone Magazine Article List - 1922
(The articles listed below are located in various issues of Stone Magazine. The advertisements, etc. are not included in some of the issues. Peggy B. Perazzo)
“Reviving the Color of Marble,” pp. 181-182
“Long Fight for Control of Stone Property,” pp. 182. (the Woodville Lime Products Co., of Toledo, Ohio)
“Accident Rates Lowest for Sandstone Quarries,” pp. 182.
“Quarrying Industry of New York,” pp. 182.
“Details of Cut-Stone Work,” pp. 183.
(Photo caption) “Ziegler Residence, 2, 4 and 6 East Sixty-Third Street, New York. Architects, Sterner & Wolfe. Builders, The Whitney Company. Cut stone contractors, B. A. & G. N. Williams Co. of pink Tennessee marble from the John J. Craig quarries.” pp. 183.
(Photo caption) “Entrance to the Ziegler Residence,” Carved in Pink Tennessee marble...” pp. 185.
(Photo caption) “Interior of Ziegler Residence, Hall and winding stairway finished in French limestone and Italian travertine.” pp. 185.
“Architectural Style Should Suit Stone Resources,” pp. 184-185.
“Will Quarry Lava Stone in Colorado,” pp. 185.
“Marble Importers Buy Astoria Plant,” pp. 186. (F. de Bellegarde, Inc., bought the stone plant of George Brown & Co., Astoria, Long Island)
“Depression in the Graphite Industry,” pp. 186.
“Prize at the American Building Exposition,” pp. 186.
“Building Industry Booming,” pp. 186.
“Mineral Filler Investigations at Birmingham,” pp. 186.
“Growth of Our Stone Production,” pp. 187-188.
(Photo caption) “Panel for Suffern National Bank, Suffern, N. Y. Carved in Indiana limestone, by the Easton Studios, at Bedford, Ind. ” pp. 188. (Indiana)
“Reopening Connecticut Brownstone Quarries,” pp. 188.
“A Quarry Company in the Bahamas,” pp. 188. (the Bahamas Stone & Construction Company, Ltd., at Nassau, in the Bahamas, British West Indies)
“A New Wisconsin Stone Company,” pp. 188. (Sawyer Stone Company in Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin)
“Standardization of Mineral Fillers and Paving Blocks,” pp. 188-189.
“A Home From Monumental Waste,” pp. 189.
“Missouri’s War Memorial in France,” pp. 189
(Photo caption) “ Missouri’s War Memorial For France. The accepted prize design by Mrs. Nancy Coonsman Hahn, student in St. Louis School of Fine Arts.” pp. 189.
“International Association News,” by Walter W. Drayer, President, pp. 192-193.
(Engraving) “L’Athénée Roumain, Bucharest. An example of modern public architecture in the picturesque capital of Roumania.” pp. 195.
“First Principles in Quarrying,” pp. 235-236.
“Production of Stone in 1921,” pp. 236.
“South Dakota Stone for Washington Monument,” pp. 236. (South Dakota stone for the interior of the Washington Monument in Washington, D.C.)
“Own Your Home Exposition,” pp. 236.
“Details for Ashlar,” pp. 237-238.
(Photo caption) “The Anderson Residence, New York. “Park Avenue and 75th Street . Architect: J. Mead Howells, New York. Stone Contractors: Davidson Bros., Inc., Newark. Of No. 1 Buff Indiana Limestone from the Indiana Quarries Company, Bedford, Ind.” pp. 238. (Indiana)
“A National Slate Association Formed,” pp. 238-239.
“Arbitration for Building Disputes,” pp. 239. (the New York Chapter of the American Institute of Architects and the Building Trades Employers’ Association Committee.)
“Building Activity in Cincinnati,” pp. 239. (Ohio)
“Monument Causes a Queer Court Claim,” pp. 239-240. (the Frederick Zeiter family Monument in Grand Rapids, Michigan)
“Increased Italian Marble Production,” pp. 240.
“Novel Ideas in Church Building,” pp. 241-243.
(Photo caption) “Park Avenue Baptist Church. Southeast corner of Park Avenue and 64th Street, New York. Henry C. Pelton and Allen & Collens, Associate Architects. Marc Eidlitz & Son, Builders. Variegated Indiana Limestone used for the Cut Stone Work, furnished by William Bradley & Son, Long Island City, New York.” pp. 241.
“MacMonnies ‘Civic Virtue’ in Place,” pp. 241.
(Photo caption) “MacMonnies’ Statue of ‘Civic Virtue,’” Just erected in City Hall Park, New York. Carved by Piccirilli Bros. in Georgia White Marble, the largest block ever quarried in America, weighing seventy-five tons in the rough.” pp. 241.
“The Granite Situation,” pp. 241.
“New York Court House Project Revived,” pp. 242.
“Trade Association Progress Shown at Building Conference,” pp. 242.
“Stone Crusher Parts by Airplane,” pp. 242.
“The First Use of Slate,” pp. 242. (first in France in A.D. 496; recorded use in the USA in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1700)
“Stone From Solomon’s Quarries,” pp. 242.
“The Isle of Pines Marble,” pp. 244. (near Nueva Gerona, Isle of Pines )
“Slate Business Improving,” pp. 244.
“International Association News,” by Walter W. Draper, President, pp. 246-247.
“Practical Stone-Cutting and Drafting: Cylindrical Vaulting and Domes,” Part XX, by Ed. W. Hind, pp. 248-249.
“Big Boston Marble Mill Burned,” pp. 249. (the Cambridge plant of the Johnson Marble Company)
“Wages in New York State are Lower,” pp. 249.
“Warping on Concrete Roads,” pp. 251.
“Color in Modern Stone Work,” pp. 291-292.
“Building Boom Points to New Prosperity,” pp. 292.
“Will Have Only a Stone School,” pp. 292. (the City of Wilkes-Barre to erect a G.A.R. Memorial Junior High School)
“Granite Memorial at Camp Merritt,” pp. 292. (Bergen County)
“Danger of Shoddy Construction,” pp. 293.
(Photo caption) “Scottish Rite Cathedral at Guthrie. Oklahoma building nearing completion that cost about $3,000,000. Architects: Hawk & Parr. Built entirely of Indiana Limestone.”) pp. 293-294.
”Solomon’s Quarries,” pp. 294-295. (stone from Jerusalem quarry installed in Masonic Temple at Guthrie, Oklahoma)
“The Great Lincoln Statue of Marble,” pp. 295.
“A New Source of Soapstone,” pp. 295-196. (near Dryden, Ontario, close to Wabigoon Lake)
(Photo caption) “Carved Mantel of Indiana Limestone. In the residence of H. L. Johnson, at Troy, Ohio. Carved by the Easton Studios, Bedford, Ind. ” pp. 295.
“Work Begun on a New Hospital,” pp. 296. (Reconstruction Hospital, at 100th St. and Central Park West, New York)
“Hydraulic Quarrying of Stone,” pp. 296. (in Texas)
“Opening a Feldspar Quarry,” pp. 296. (in Tammela and Somero, Finland)
“Growth of a Great Quarry Co., pp. 296. (John A. Kling and the Kelley Island Lime & Transport Company in Cleveland, Ohio)
“Details of Lintels and Arches,” pp. 297-298.
(Photo caption) “Columbia Trust Company Building, New York. On West 125th Street. Architect, Alfred Bossom; Cut Stone Contractor, Rudolf Seus, New York. Built of Indiana Limestone.” pp. 297.
“Famous Temples Offered to America,” pp. 298. (Temple of Philae in Egypt)
“All Records for Building Broken,” pp. 298.
“Thick Stone Blocks for a Roadway,” pp. 300.
“Standardization of Stone and Slate,” pp. 300-301.
“A Wonderful Shipment of Stone,” pp. 301. (“...a Solid trainload of monster monolithic columns of Indiana limestone to be used in the new Pennsylvania State Office Building that is being erected in the capitol grounds at Harrisburg ....”)
“Granite Memorial for War Dogs,” pp. 301. (at Hartsdale near White Plains)
“Will Build Big Dams in the West,” pp. 301. (the Manitoba Power Company, Ltd.)
“International Association News, by Walter W. Drayer, President, pp. 302-303.
“Novel Building for a Stone Office,” pp. 304-305
(Photo caption) “A Stone Office at Bridgeport, Conn. Built of stone from the refuse heaps, and modeled after the Bargello, Flornce” - Bridgeport, Connecticut.
(Photo caption) “The ‘Bargello’ Stairway. Interior view in the novel stone office just completed at Bridgeport, Conn.” (Connecticut)
“A Book for Letter Cutters,” pp. 305. (“The Letter Cutter’s Manual for Monumental and Other Masons,” by Arthur J. Hewitt and edited by Arthur Seymour Jenings.”)
“The Stone Quarrying Industry (in 1922),” pp. 350.
“Stone Working in Japan,” pp. 350.
“New Bank on Old Bowery Landmark,” pp. 350. (the Citizens Savings Bank building at southwest corner of Bowery and Canal street, New York)
“A Famous Marble Mansion,” pp. 350. (Hopkins-Searles mansion at Great Barrington, Massachusetts)
“A Huge Concrete Bridge Span Falls,” pp. 350. (Capelen Bridge, Minneapolis, Minnesota)
“Points in Stone Detailing,” pp. 351.
(Photo caption) “Magnolia Petroleum Co. Building, Dallas, Texas, Architect: Alfred C. Bossom, New York. Built of Buff Indiana Limestone from the quarries of the Indiana Quarries company, at Bedford, Ind. ” pp. 351.
(Photo caption) “Entrance of the Magnolia Building at Dallas. Architect: Alfred C. Bossom, New York. The entire building is of Buff Indiana Limestone from the quarries of the Indiana Quarries Company, Bedford, Ind.”) pp. 353.
“Scarcity of Labor in Building Trades,” pp. 353.
“Small Talc and Soapstone Production,” pp. 353.
“Cleaning Stone Buildings,” pp. 354-355.
“The Housing Shortage is Still Acute,” pp. 355-356.
(Photo caption) “Moving Part of a Stone Church. In order to increase the seating capacity, the Central Presbyterian Church, of Buffalo, N. Y., a stone building, was cut in two and a section 78 ft. wide, 65 ft. high, and 8 ft. thick, was moved 30 feet, the work being done in 16 hours.” pp. 356.
“An Instance of Cooperative Designing in a Los Angeles Court of Justice,” pp. 356.
“Court House Contracted Awarded for a Superstructure of Granite,” pp. 356. (the New York Court House)
“College Building Work in Canada,” pp. 356. (University of Toronto buildings)
“The Building Boom in Chicago,” pp. 356.
“Uses of Ground Talc,” pp. 358.
“Slate Quarries and Waste,” pp. 358-359.
“Building Work in New York State,” pp. 359.
“Construction Work in Canadian Cities Shows Increased Activity,” pp. 359.
“Fighting a City Quarry Law,” pp. 359. (Minneapolis, Minnesota)
“Bedford’s Latest Stone Office Building,” pp. 363.
(Photo caption) “New Office Building for a Stone Company. General Offices for the Fürst-Kerber Cut Stone Company, just completed at Bedford, Ind. ” (Indiana) pp. 363.
“Flashings for Stone-faced Buildings,” pp. 403-405.
“Statuary in Georgia Marble,” pp. 405-406.
(Photo caption) “Federal Reserve Bank at Atlanta. Architect, A. Ten Eyck Brown, Atlanta. Front built of Georgia marble from the quarries of the Georgia Marble Company, at Tate, Ga. ” pp. 406.
“Slate for Country House Roofs,” pp. 406.
“Maine Granite for the Court House,” pp. 406. (in New York)
“Maine Granite Men See a Ray of Hope,” pp. 406-407. (courthouse in New York )
“The Nebraska State Capitol,” pp. 407-408.
(Photo caption) “Excelsior Savings Bank, New York. At 221 West 57th Street. Architect, R. H. Almirety, New York. Built of Indiana limestone from the Indiana Quarries Company. Cut by Henry Hanlein & Son, New York ” pp. 407.
“First Contracts for the Nebraska Capitol,” pp. 408.
“Another Big Hotel for New York,” pp. 408. United Hotels Company to erect hotel on “entire block bounded by Forty-fifth and Forty-sixth Streets, Madison and Vanderbilt Avenues, New York....” pp. 408.
“Quarry Idle for Twenty-five Years Reopened,” pp. 408. (stone quarry at Tilden Avenue and Higby Lane, Utica, New York) pp. 408.
“Prizes for Building Plans,” pp. 408. (for a 22-story building at Michigan Boulevard and Illinois Street)
“Lavas and Granites in the Moon,” pp. 408.
“Skill in Rock Blasting,” pp. 408-409.
“Marble Work in a Jersey Bank,” pp. 409.
(Photo caption) First National Bank of Jersey City - New Jersey - Main entrance vestibule finished in choice foreign marbles and stones in a wide variety of color and pattern.” pp. 409.
“K. of C. Building for Glens Falls,” pp. 409-410
“New Life for the Hallowell Granite Industry,” pp. 410.
”Durability of Stone Construction,” pp. 410.
“Novel Use for an Old Quarry,” pp. 410. (stone quarry near Oakland, California, converted to Greek amphitheater)
“Fewer Mechanics for Building Jobs,” pp. 411.
“First Break in the Granite Strike,” pp. 411.
(Photo caption) “Stairway in Hotz Residence, Chicago. A novel design by George W. Perkins, architect. Cut Stone Contractors, T. C. Diener & Company, Chicago.” pp. 411.
“International Association News,” by Walter W. Drayer, President, 414-416.
“Growth of an Omaha Marble Firm,” pp. 416. (Sunderland Brothers Company, Omaha, Nebraska)
“Nebraska Limestone Seeks Larger Market,” pp. 416.
“A New Fifth Avenue Department Store,” pp. 416. (Saks department store on Fifth Avenue between Forty-ninth and Fiftieth Streets, New York)
“Indiana Brings Charges Against Stone Company,” pp. 416.
“Practical Stone-Cutting and Drafting: Arches in Circular Walls,” Part I , by Ed. W. Hind, pp. 417-418.
“Suit Against a Quarry Company,” pp. 418. (Statler Stone Co. of Piqua, Ohio)
“Rift and Grain in Granite and Their Origin,” by T. Nelson Dale, pp. 461-464.
“Preservation of Sandstones,” pp. 464.
“New Limestone Quarry at Ellettsville,” pp. 464. (east of Ellettsville, Indiana)
(Photo caption) “Museum of Heads and Horns, Zoological Park, New York. Architect, Henry D. Whitfield, New York. Indiana limestone from the quarries of the Indiana Quarries Co., Cut stone contractors, Henry Hanlein & Son, New York .” pp. 464.
“Quarrying 3000 B. C. - How the Pyramids Were Built,” pp. 465-466.
(Photo caption) “Interior Drake Hotel, Chicago, Ill., pp. 465.
(Photo caption) “National State Bank, Elizabeth, N. J. Dennison & Hirons, New York, Architects. Executed in Napoleon gray marble cut by George Brown & Co., pp. 466.
(Photo caption) “Noel State Bank, Chicago, Ill., Architects, Weary & Alford. Built entirely of Indiana limestone.” pp. 467.
“Would Use Native Stone,” pp. 467
“Accidents at Slate Quarries in 1921,” pp. 468.
“German Marble Quarries,” pp. 468.
“Ontario’s Soapstone Deposits,” pp. 469.
“School Turned Over to Study of Stone,” pp. 469.
“City Built of Porcelain,” pp. 496. (Meisen, Germany)
(Photo caption) “Empire Savings Bank, 231 West 125th St., New York. Architects, Trowbridge & Livingston. Cut Stone Contractors, Barr, Thaw & Fraser. No. 1 Buff Indiana Limestone from the Indiana Quarries Co.
“Practical Stone-Cut and Drafting: Arches in Circular Walls,” Part 2 , by Ed. W. Hind, pp. 474-475.
“Sheet and Flow Structure in Granite and Their Origin,” by T. Nelson Dale, by T. Nelson Dale, pp. 515-516.
(Photo caption) “Sheet Structure in a Granite Quarry”
(Photo caption) “‘Strain Sheet’ at Black Mountain Quarry, Brattleboro, Vermont,” pp. 516.
“Quarrying and Stone Working in Japan,” pp. 517-518.
(Photo caption) “Surfacing Granite Blocks in Japan"
(Photo caption) “Carving Granite by Pneumatic Tool”
(Photo caption) “View of a Japanese Quarry Getting Out Blocks of Granite.”
“Slate Roofs,” pp. 518.
“Stone Production in the United States for 1921,” pp. 518.
“Increased Marble Production in Belgium,” pp. 518.
“The Outlook of the Stone Industry,” pp. 518.
“Quarrying in Palestine,” pp. 518.
“Cleaning Sculptured Stone and Statuary,” pp. 519-520.
(Photo caption) “The New Educational Building of the Hispanic Society Group, 155th Street, near Riverside Drive, New York. Built of Variegated Indiana Limestone from the Indiana Quarries Company. Architects: McKin, Mead & White. Cut Stone Contractors: Monahan Cut Stone Co., Newark, N. J.” pp. 519.
“The Menhirs of Carnac,” pp. 520.
“Cars Available for Transporting Stone,” pp. 521.
“Addition to the New York Stock Exchange,” pp. 521.
(Photo caption) “Addition to the New York Stock Exchange, Corner of Broad and Wall Streets. Architects: Trowbridge & Livingston, New York. Cut Stone Contractors: B. A. & G. N. Williams. Built entirely of White Georgia marble from the quarries of the Georgia Marble Company, Tate, Georgia. pp. 521.
“International Association News,” by Walter W. Drayer, President, pp. 522-524.
“The Age of the Earth,” pp. 524.
“Slate Investigations,” pp. 524. (investigations by Dr. Oliver Bowles, mineral technologist of the U. S. Bureau of Mines.)
“Limestone in New Quebec,” pp. 524.
(Photo caption) “Federal Reserve Bank, Kansas City, Mo. Built entirely of Variegated Indiana Limestone from the quarries of The Indiana Quarries Company, Cut Stone Contractors: Bedford Steam Stone Works. Architects: Graham Anderson, Probst & White, Chicago.” pp. 524.
“Memorial Relief Work Carved in Slate,” pp. 525.
(Photo caption) “Memorial Relief Work Carved in Slate” pp. 525.
(Photo caption) “ Indiana Limestone Mantel Built in the Drake Hotel, Chicago. Architects: Marshall & Fox.” pp. 525. (Illinois)
“Use of Stone in Bungalow Construction,” pp. 527.
“Accidents at Stone Quarries in 1921,” pp. 527.
“Practical Stone-Cutting and Drafting: Arches in Circular Walls,” Part 3, by Ed. W. Hind, pp. 528-529.
“Caring for Explosives,” pp. 530.
“Education and the Building Stone Industry,” pp. 530.
“The Development of Special Finishes in Limestone,” by H. S. Brightly, pp. 573-575
(Photo caption) “Detail of Machine Crandell Finish, Globe Indemnity Building, Newark, N. J.” (New Jersey)
(Photo caption) “Detail of Shot Sawed Finish Ashler, Corner of 47th Street and Madison Avenue, New York”
“Random Ashler Treatment in a College Building,” pp. 575.
(Photo caption) “Evansville College Building, Evansville, Ind. Showing rough-sawer, four-side, quarry-run random Limestone Ashler. Architects: Miller, Fullenwider & Dowling. pp. 575.
“Sculptured Stone and the Mosaic Art: Part I. Antique Mosaic Art,” pp. 576-578 (to be continued).
(Photo caption) Graffito Work from the Pavement of the Cathedral of Siena, Italy. Period: 1423 & “Tesselated pavement (Opus Tesselatum) From the Excavations of Pompeii. Period: About 80 B.C.
(Photo caption) “Tesselated Pavement (Opus Tesselatum) From the excavations of Pompeii. Period: About the beginning of the Christian era”
(Photo caption) “Marble Pulpit in the Cathedral at Rovello, Italy. Inlaid with opus musivum mosaic. (completed in 1272.)
(Photo caption) “Tesselated Pavement From Pompeii. Made about the beginning of the Christian era”
“Making the Stone Plant Fire-proof: Part I. Causes of Fires in Stone Plants,” pp. 579
(Photo caption) “United States Mortgage Company, Madison Avenue and 74th Street, New York. Henry Otis Chapman, Architect; Monahan Stone Co., Newark, N. J., Cut Stone Contractors. Base course and entrance of Tennessee Marble. Remainder built of Buff Indiana Limestone from the quarries of the Consolidated stone Co., Bedford, Indiana. pp. 579.
(Photo caption) “View of the John L. Goss Corporation Granite Company, Stonington, Maine” pp. 580.
“An Interesting Quarrying Experiment,” pp. 580-581. (“A block of ‘Deer Isle Granite,’ measuring two hundred and twenty feet long, twenty feet wide and eight feet deep, was recently split off at the quarries of the John L. Goss Corporation at Stonington, Maine, with three and one-half inch plug wedges....”
“North African Marble,” pp. 581.
“A Fine Example of Limestone Trim,” pp. 581.
(Photo caption) “Central Presbyterian Church, Montclair, N. J. The portico, columns, entablature and all the trim up to the base of the spire are of Indiana Limestone. George Brown & Co., Newark, N. J., cut stone contractors; Carrere & Hastings, Shreve, Lamp & Blake, architects.”
“The Underground Quarries of Paris,” pp. 582.
“The Building Outlook in England,” pp. 582.
(Photo caption) “Detail of Evansville College Building, Evansville, Ind. Showing rough-sawed four-sided, quarry-run Indiana Limestone ashler wall facing. Architects: Miller, Fullenwider & Dowling” pp. 582.
“The Building Outlook in England,” pp. 582.
“International Association News,” by Walter W. Drayer, President, pp. 584.
“Practical Stone-Cutting and Drafting: Arches in Circular Walls,” Part 4, pp. 586-587.
“The Revised Tariff on Building Stone,” pp. 588.
“Safety Signs in the Marble Quarries,” by D. C. Gale. pp. 634.
(Photo caption) “The Pittsford Valley Quarry. 313 feet deep, with supporting column of natural marble in the foreground” pp. 634.
(Photo caption) “Two of the Gigantic Concrete Piers Which Span the Open Space Above a Water Filled Quarry Hole”) pp. 634.
“New Mill of the Consolidated Stone Company,” pp. 635-636. (Bedford, Indiana)
(Photo caption) “New Plant of the Consolidated Stone Company. Showing general view of all units of the mill, including Dugan Mill, Bedford Mill, Power House, Offices and Garages”
(Photo caption) “Interior of New Bedford Mill of the Consolidated Stone Company. Equipment consists of 18 planers, 5 travellers, 2 lathes, 6 gangs, 3 Diamond jointing saws, 1 Diamond rip saw, 1 Diamond drag saw and 1 header”
“Stone Walls for Smaller Residences,” pp. 636.
“Limestone Quarrying Studies,” pp. 636. (by the United States Bureau of Mines) (The first of the papers entitled: “Serial 2401 Stripping problems in limestone quarries of the Shenandoah Valley,’ by Oliver Bowles”)
“Sculptured Stone and the Mosaic Art, Part II. Tesselated Pavements,” pp. 637 (to be continued).
(Photo caption) Opus Sectile. Tesselated Pavements from Excavations in Rome ”
(Photo caption) “Opus Tesselatum from Napoleon’s Palace at Tuileries”
(Photo caption) “Example from Dining Room in Palace at Tuileries”
“Efficiency in Stone Erecting in Skeleton Frame Building,” pp. 641.
(Photo caption) “Illinois Merchants Bank Building, Chicago. Cut Stone Contractors, Charles G. Fanning & Co., Cicero, Ill. Built in Variegated Indiana Limestone, from the quarries of the Indiana Quarries Co. Architects, Graham, Anderson, Probst and White”
“International Association News,” by Walter W. Drayer, President, pp. 642-643.
“The Building Outlook in the South,” pp. 644.
“Practical Stone-Cutting and Drafting: Arches in Circular Walls,” Part 5, by Ed. W. Hind (to be continued) pp. 644-645.
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