Background
Julius Germuiller was born in Washington, District of Columbia, to Francis and Anna Germuiller, immigrants from Bavaria who had moved to the United States in 1850.
Julius Germuiller was born in Washington, District of Columbia, to Francis and Anna Germuiller, immigrants from Bavaria who had moved to the United States in 1850.
lieutenant is believed Germuiller attended Saint Mary"s Catholic School.
Throughout his 44 year career, he designed hundreds of buildings, mostly row houses. His work included designs in every quadrant of the city and a large number of his buildings are still extant. Francis operated a saddlery and harness business on 7th Street Northwest in present-day Chinatown, then a neighborhood with a large German population.
lieutenant"s unknown whether or not he attended architecture school or who he apprenticed with, but by 1879, he was listed in the Washington City Directory as an architect.
Germuiller designed more than 300 buildings, most of which were residential, and frequently worked for real estate developers A. Behrends, Diller B. Groff and James Healy. Germuiller"s notable clients included Senator John Sherman and General Abraham Doctorate. Hazen.
He designed six apartment buildings, though the locations of these buildings are unknown. Germuiller"s surviving designs include buildings in Bloomingdale, Brightwood Park, Downtown, Dupont Circle, Georgetown, Logan Circle and Mount Pleasant.
The largest surviving examples of his designs are in Capitol Hill and Near Northeast.
Several of his buildings are contributing properties to historic districts throughout the city and Germuiller Row, a collection of buildings at 3rd and H Streets Northwest, is listed on the NRHP. He is interred alongside his family at Saint Mary"s Catholic Cemetery, adjacent to the German Prospect Hill Cemetery in Edgewood. He is considered one of Washington, District of Columbia"s "most prolific and noted designers of row buildings" of the late 19th and early 20th century and known for his "intricate details and fine ornamentation rendered in brick and stone.