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George Maher
Maher is considered one of the important Prairie School-style architects who practiced during the late-19th and early-20th centuries. He blended traditional American house styles with more progressive European Arts & Crafts-style designs. Many of his residences reflect a broad horizontal character, with overhanging roof eaves, a strong rectilinear massing, and symmetrically placed windows centered on a prominent central entry. One of the largest concentrations of Maher's work is along Hutchinson Street, on Chicago's North Side lakefront.
Maher also was known for his "motif-rhythm" theory of design, which used the form of an indigenous plant as the unifying motif for an individual project. "The leading flower of a neighborhood is nature's symbol of the spirit breathed there," Maher said. The Patten House in Evanston (1902; demolished) and the King-Nash House, for example, both used a thistle; the Rubens House in Glencoe adopted a hollyhock; and the Magerstadt House in the south side Kenwood District used a poppy.
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