William P. Wentworth

Wentworth or William P. Wentworth, was a Vermont-based architect who worked in Boston, but did institutional and ecclesiastic commissions in other areas.

[1] Works by Wentworth that both survive and are listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places include: Mr Wentworth is also credited with designing the private home of James Wilson Hunter, a prominent dry goods merchant and banker in Norfolk, VA in 1894.

The home is now a museum for Victorian art and architecture.

(https://www.hunterhousemuseum.org/) Wentworth may be confused with Charles F. Wentworth who was the architect who worked with Ralph Adams Cram.

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