Edward L. Angell (1847 – 1923) was an American architect who worked in Providence, Rhode Island, and New York City.[1]: p.
In 1874 he was appointed advisory architect to the committee that had charge of the design and construction of the new Providence City Hall.
[2] Following a competition, Angell, along with architect Alpheus C. Morse and builder David Childs, recommended the design of Samuel J. F. Thayer, which was built.
In 1878 City Hall was finished, and Angell went west, working for a number of architects on public buildings in the Midwest.
He designed Queen Anne, Romanesque, neo-Grec and Renaissance Revival works, mainly in Greenwich Village and on the Upper West Side.