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  1. Architect. Art Deco style of the Continental Life Building in St. Louis. William Butts Ittner (September 4, 1864 – 1936) was an American architect in St. Louis, Missouri. He designed over 430 school buildings in Missouri and other areas, was president of the St. Louis Chapter of the American Institute of Architects from 1893 to ...

  2. Notable contributing buildings include the Public Works Administration funded Knox County Courthouse (1934–1935) designed by William B. Ittner, Bishoff Bakery (1891), Northern Hotel (1860s), Ennis House/Northern Hotel (c. 1865), Edina School and Gymnasium (1915–1916), D. H. Mudd Building (c. 1904), Phillip Linville Building (c ...

  3. The most remarkable building from the latter part of Ittner's career is the epitome of St. Louis Art Deco--the 1929 Continental Building in Midtown. William B. Ittner died in 1936 but his name lives on in St. Louis architecture through the firms of William B. Ittner, Inc. and Ittner & Bowersox, Inc.

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  4. William B. Ittner was the architect. The school was named for Thomas Condit Miller, an educator in Fairmont, professor of education at West Virginia University, State Superintendent of Schools for West Virginia, and ninth principal of Shepherd College. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2013. References

  5. archINFORM homepage of William Butts Ittner (*1864 †1936) – American architect, active in Missouri [contains a list of buildings]

  6. William Butts Ittner (9/4/1864-3/2/1936) Saint Louis, Missouri (F.A.I.A) A nationally noted figure in the field of school architecture, and head of the firm of William B. Ittner, Inc. In Saint Louis, where Mr. Ittner was born and educated, he graduated at the age of nineteen at the Manual Training School, Washington University, and subsequently ...

  7. 30 ago 2012 · The St. Louis Schools of William B. Ittner. In 1897, a man named William B. Ittner became the Commissioner of School Buildings for the Board of Education in St. Louis. It was a new position, created to oversee an ambitious plan to design and build scores of new public schools in St. Louis city.