Jackson C. Gott
Jackson C. Gott was an American architect. Gott was born in Baltimore County, practiced in and around Baltimore all his life, and was named a Fellow of the [American Institute of Architects] in 1889.
Work
Buildings designed by him which survive and are listed on the National Register of Historic Places include:- Johnson Building, 26-30 S. Howard St., Baltimore, 1880
- Rombro Building, 22–24 S. Howard St., Baltimore, 1881
- Governor [John Walter Smith House], 104 S. Church St., Snow Hill, Maryland, 1890
- main building of the Hendler Creamery, 1100 E Baltimore St & 1107 E Fayette St., Baltimore, 1892
- Renaissance Building, formerly the Masonic Temple, 101-107 W. Broad Street, Richmond, Virginia, constructed 1888-1893
- Southern District Police Station, 28 E. Ostend St., Baltimore, 1896
- One or more buildings in Union Bridge Historic District, Roughly bounded by Bellevue, E. Locust, Buttersburg Alley, Church, Whyte, W. Locust and the Western Maryland RR tracks, Union Bridge, MD
- One or more buildings in Federal Hill South Historic District, Roughly bounded by Cross St., Olive St., Marshall St., Ostend St., Fort Ave. and Covington St., Baltimore
- the Charles Theatre, Baltimore, 1892
- the Maryland Penitentiary, now the Metropolitan Transition Center, Baltimore, 1894
- central section of the Worcester County Courthouse, Snow Hill, Maryland