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Paul Schulze
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Paul Schulze

Biographical InformationPaul Schulze, a prominent 19th century architect, was born in Breslau, Germany in 1828. He studied at the technical high school in Breslau and later trained with architects offices in Vienna and Berlin. He immigrated to Boston in 1849 and designed two buildings for Harvard University, Appleton Chapel and Boylston Hall. He moved to New York in 1857 where he worked with many architects including Paul F. Schoen with whom he formed the partnership Schulze & Schoen. In 1877 he moved to Washington D.C. and in 1878 formed the partnership Cluss & Schulze with Adolph Cluss. The firm continued until 1889 when Cluss retired. Paul Schulze died in Oakland, California in 1897.

Related Buildings / SitesReferences
Maynard, W. Barksdale. Architecture in the United States, 1800-1850. New Haven: Yale UP, 2002. Print.
The American Architect and Building News 55.1102 (1897): 42. Google Books. Web. 26 Apr. 2016.
Cluss, Adolf. Eulogy for Paul Schulze. Print. AIA Library, RG 801, SR 3, B5412, Folder 5a