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Brentwood Drive #287
Brentwood Drive #287
TitleBrentwood Drive #287
DescriptionThis home was the first built in the original S.H. Kleinman Realty Co. planned Lake Forest Residential Park, Country Club and Golf Course development. More than 1000 homes had been planned for this complex, but only two homes and a clubhouse were completed before the 1929 stock market crash forced Kleinman Realty out of business. This circa-1929 Tudor Revival was once the home to Harry Trishman (1900-1980), mechanical engineer and designer of hydraulic presses for Adamson United Co. of Akron, Ohio. Trishman also served as deacon for the Congregational Church of Hudson.
Date1950
SubjectHudson (Ohio)
Streets and Roads
Houses
Photography
Lake Forest Golf Course
Lake Forest Drive
Brentwood Drive
NamesMoos, William
ContributorsHudson Library & Historical Society
TypeImage
Format5 in. x 3.5 in.
SourceHU_LakeForest_4.jpg
LanguageEnglish
RelationHouses of Hudson Collection
RightsThis material from the picture file is protected by the copyright law. The library makes this picture available for the personal use of the borrower to be used for private study, scholarship or research. Reproduction, alteration or derivative use of this visual image for the purposes other than those listed above without the express written permission of the copyright holder may constitute an infringement of copyright law.
CreatorWilliam Moos
About the CreatorWilliam Moos (1919-1984) was a painter, architect and beloved arts and crafts teacher. He also directed the art department at Western Reserve Academy in Hudson, Ohio. Mr. Moos was reared in St. Cloud, Minnesota, and studied architecture at St. John's College and Yale University. He later practiced architecture in New York City and worked as a field engineer and interior designer before coming to the academy in 1945. He was responsible for the design work for the restoration of Western Reserve Academy's Chapel and Christ Church Episcopal in Hudson, Ohio. He had a keen sense of historic preservation of buildings and served as a founding member of the Hudson Heritage Association. Later in life he also served as a lobbyist for the American Civil Liberties Union.
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