. . . . . . . . . . "Joseph Horatio Anderson"@es . . . . . "Joseph Horatio Anderson fue un arquitecto estadounidense de estilo neocolonial nacido en Gran Breta\u00F1a activo a fines del siglo XVIII en Annapolis, provincia de Maryland (Estados Unidos). Su obra m\u00E1s conocida es la Casa del Estado de Maryland en Annapolis."@es . . . "Joseph Horatio Anderson"@en . . . . . . "1073298423"^^ . . . "Joseph Horatio Anderson"@en . "Joseph Horatio Anderson (... \u2013 Annapolis, 1778) \u00E8 stato un architetto statunitense, attivo ad Annapolis, nella provincia del Maryland verso la fine del XVIII secolo. Non si hanno molte notizie della sua vita."@it . "Joseph Horatio Anderson fue un arquitecto estadounidense de estilo neocolonial nacido en Gran Breta\u00F1a activo a fines del siglo XVIII en Annapolis, provincia de Maryland (Estados Unidos). Su obra m\u00E1s conocida es la Casa del Estado de Maryland en Annapolis."@es . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Joseph Horatio Anderson (... \u2013 Annapolis, 1778) \u00E8 stato un architetto statunitense, attivo ad Annapolis, nella provincia del Maryland verso la fine del XVIII secolo. Non si hanno molte notizie della sua vita."@it . "Joseph Horatio Anderson was a British-born Colonial American architect active in Annapolis, Province of Maryland, in the late 18th century. He designed Whitehall (1764), a plantation house in Anne Arundel County, outside Annapolis. He was the likely designer of the third (and current) Maryland State House (1772). He designed the second St. Anne's Church (designed 1775, completed 1792), also in Annapolis, although the church was not completed until more than a decade after his death. Quite few details are known of Anderson's life."@en . . . "31417876"^^ . . . . . . . . . "3522"^^ . . . . . . . . "before 1778"@en . . . . . . . "Joseph Horatio Anderson"@it . . . . . . . "Joseph Horatio Anderson"@en . . . . "Joseph Horatio Anderson was a British-born Colonial American architect active in Annapolis, Province of Maryland, in the late 18th century. He designed Whitehall (1764), a plantation house in Anne Arundel County, outside Annapolis. He was the likely designer of the third (and current) Maryland State House (1772). He designed the second St. Anne's Church (designed 1775, completed 1792), also in Annapolis, although the church was not completed until more than a decade after his death. Quite few details are known of Anderson's life. Though Anderson boasted he was \"regularly bread to those Sciences architectural design and construction & the only one upon the Continant [sic],\" his octagonal design for the dome of the Maryland State House was found to be \"contrary to all rules of architecture,\" and later replaced. In 1770, Anderson sent a letter to Rhode Island College offering his architectural services to the newly established institution. The correspondence, however, arrived only after construction on the college's new building had already begun."@en .