Bigelow and Wadsworth was formed in 1909, a partnership of Henry Forbes Bigelow and Philip Wadsworth. It was the successor to Winslow and Bigelow, Walter Thacher Winslow having died in January of 1909.
The firm remained Bigelow and Wadsworth until about 1928, when Edward A. Hubbard and Giles M. Smith — both of whom already were with the firm — were made partners, and it became Bigelow, Wadsworth, Hubbard, and Smith. After Bigelow’s death in August of 1929, the firm continued as Wadsworth, Hubbard, and Smith.
Bigelow and Wadsworth designed the Weston Town Hall in 1917, which Douglass Shand-Tucci’s Built in Boston notes is a “particularly fine” example of Georgian Revival architecture.
Back Bay Work
1910 | 400 Beacon (Remodeling) |
1912 | 340 Beacon (Remodeling) |
1913 | 448 Beacon (Remodeling) |
1915 | 417 Beacon (Remodeling) |
1915 | 9 Gloucester (Remodeling) |
1916 | 149 Beacon (Remodeling) |
1916 | 169 Marlborough (Remodeling) |
1916 | 249 Marlborough (Remodeling) |
1917 | 263 Beacon (Remodeling) |
1917 | 39 Commonwealth (Remodeling) |
1919 | 278 Clarendon (203 Beacon) (Remodeling) |
1919 | 191 Marlborough (Remodeling) |
1921 | 340 Beacon (Remodeling) |
1922 | 292 Beacon (Remodeling) |
1925 | 137 Marlborough |
1925 | 180 Marlborough (Remodeling) |
1926 | 129 Commonwealth (Remodeling) |
1926 | 150 Commonwealth (Remodeling) |
1926 | 192 Commonwealth |
1926 | 174 Marlborough (Remodeling) |
1927 | 172 Beacon |
1927 | 264 Beacon |
1927 | 9 Exeter (Remodeling) |