Fred A. Henderich

These homes exhibited native wood shingles, palm tree porch posts, and coquina stone fireplaces.

[2] Houses include: Henderich also took advantage of the area's natural resources to bring the Mediterranean Revival style to Florida in civic architecture.

The new Flagler Hospital opened in 1921, designed by Henderich with a stucco shell dash exterior and a red tile roof.

In 1925, Henderich designed a masonry structure at 102 Martin Luther King Ave (then Central Avenue) which served as Saint Augustine's first public high school for African-Americans.

The Colored School was renamed Excelsior in 1928 and served as Lincolnville's community center for over forty years.