Alfred J. R. E. Zucker (January 23, 1852 – August 2, 1913)[1] was a German-American architect, who worked in Galveston, Texas, Mississippi, New York City, and Buenos Aires.
From 1873 to 1876 he worked in the Office of the Supervising Architect, in Washington, D.C.[2] In 1877, Zucker relocated to the coastal city of Galveston.
The following year, he returned to New York and found work in the office of noted architect Henry Fernbach.
These former employees received a fraction of the payments from each design executed, relieving Zucker of the worries of regular wages.
Near the end of his American career, Zucker was associated with J. Riely Gordon, a noted architect of public buildings.