Saunders and Lawton was an architectural firm consisting of partners George Willis Lawton and Charles Willard Saunders active from 1898 until 1915 in Seattle, Washington . Other architects at the firm included Herman A. Moldenhour, Paul David Richardson, and J. Charles Stanley.[1] Following Saunders' retirement, Moldenhour would take his place as partner in the firm under the name Lawton & Moldenhour , who would have moderate success throughout the 1920s.
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Moldenhour later designed the original terminal at Seattle–Tacoma International Airport .
Charles Saunders
Denny Hall, University of Washington
King County Courthouse #2 (1890–1891), First Hill, Seattle
Cascade School (1893–1894), Cascade, Seattle
Seattle Theatre #1 (1893), Downtown Seattle
Denny Hall , Arthur Hall and Mary Hall, (1893–1895) University of Washington, Seattle
The Bon Marché Department Store #2 (1896) Downtown Seattle
Saunders and Lawton
The Baillargeon Building (1907)
Manufacturers' Exchange Building (1907)
Westland Building in the Pioneer Square–Skid Road Historic District
Stewart House (1898), Seattle
Walla Walla Elementary School (1902), Central District, Seattle
Lumber Exchange Building (1902–1903) downtown Seattle[2]
Alaska Building (1903–1904) at Pioneer Square in Seattle
Beacon Hill Elementary School #2 (1903–1904), Beacon Hill, Seattle
Norton Building #1 (1904), Seattle
Dairy Barn (1909) at the Alaska–Yukon–Pacific Exposition (AYPE) in Seattle
Forestry Building (1908–1909) at the AYPE, later served as the home of the Washington State Museum until a bark beetle infestation was discovered
Women's Building (1908–1909) AYPE
Alhambra Theatre #2 (1909) downtown Seattle
Henry C. Chadwick House in Seattle
Cottage Project in Seattle
Crane Company warehouse and office building (1907), Pioneer Square, Seattle
Dunn Tin Storage Warehouse, Seattle
Dr. R.P. Lincoln Apartment House, Seattle,
Manufacturers Building (1905–1906), Pioneer Square, Seattle
Mottman Lodge, Seattle
Northern State Hospital , Sedro-Woolley
Polson Building (1909–1910), Pioneer Square, Seattle
Rainier Club (1904), downtown Seattle
Seattle Buddhist Church #1 (1906–1908), First Hill, Seattle[lower-alpha 1]
Monroe Correctional Complex, Monroe, Washington
Westland Building, Pioneer Square , Seattle[1] designed for Albert Hambach[3]
Masonic Lodge (1915), First Hill, Seattle
One or more buildings in Hawthorne Square , 4800 Fremont Avenue North in Seattle
Liggett Building (1927),[4] 1424 4th Avenue in Seattle