Background
John Holden Greene was born 1777 at Warwick, Rhode Island, United States.
(The Nelson W. Aldrich House, also known as the Dr. S. B. ...)
The Nelson W. Aldrich House, also known as the Dr. S. B. Tobey House, is a Federal-style house at 110 Benevolent Street in Providence, Rhode Island that was the home of Nelson W. Aldrich, a U.S. Senator from 1881 to 1911.
John Holden Greene was born 1777 at Warwick, Rhode Island, United States.
In the following list of Mr. Green’s work in Providence all buildings were extant in 1941 unless otherwise noted: St. Joseph's Episcopal Church, of Gothic design, built in 1810; Congregational Church (now Unitarian) at Benefit and Benevolent Streets; Sullivan-Dorr house, 1809; St. John’s Church, 1810; Governor Elisha Dyer house on Power Street, 1818; William Watson house, 60 College Street, 1819; Friends' School, 1819; Candace Allen house, 1819; Roger Williams Bank Building, 1830 (razed); the Granite Block on Market Street, built c. 1820, demolished in 1939; John Larcher house, 282 Benefot Street, 1823, now home of the Handicraft Club; First Universalist Church, 1825 (no longer standing); Rufus Greene house, razed; Truman Beckwith residence, 42 College Street, and the Benoni Cooke house 112-14 Main Street, 1826; the Dexter Asylum dating from 1830; the Franklin Hotel at 31 North Main Street, and the Woodward house, 21 James Street.
Also ascribed to Mr. Greene is the design of the Hotel on Market Street in Bristol, R. I., of Greek Revival type, and at Savannah, Ga., the Independent Presbyterian Church may have been built from his plans since it is almost a replica of the Congregational Church at Providence