Edward Brodhead Green was an 1878 graduate of Cornell University's College of Architecture, and designed a number of buildings which made up Cornell's Agriculture Quadrangle, including Bailey Hall (1912), Caldwell Hall (1913), the Computing and Communications Center (1912, originally known as Comstock Hall), Fernow Hall (1915), and the original Roberts Hall (1906, demolished 1990).
Green's best-known commissions were designed with his partner William Sydney Wicks (1854–1917), as Green & Wicks. The firm's chronology is:[1]
1884: Green & Wicks founded
1917: Renamed E.B. Green & Son
1933: Renamed E. B Green after his son's death[dubious – discuss]
^Lewis, A. (2013). American Country Houses of the Gilded Age: (Sheldon's "Artistic Country-Seats"). Courier Corporation. p. 80. ISBN 9780486141213. Retrieved 21 January 2018.
^Steffensen-Bruce, Ingrid A. (1998). Marble Palaces, Temples of Art: Art Museums, Architecture, and American Culture, 1890–1930. Bucknell University Press. p. 72. ISBN 9780838753514. Retrieved 21 January 2018.
^"Crosby Hall (CROSBY) – South Campus, Academic Sector". University at Buffalo. Retrieved 1 November 2013.