| Loss | 1895 | U.S. Championships | Grass | |1896
Architectural workFielding's works include:
- 1891 – Fielding's own residence – "The Barn" – at 28 West Walnut Lane, Philadelphia, was a renovation by Fielding that was once the Wyck barn, built in 1796 by J. Frederick Thomas.
- 1892 – The Terry Building, 207 South Jefferson Street, Roanoke, Virginia. A seven-story Italianesque stone and pressed-brick office building with a mansard roof, became the tallest building in Roanoke. Peyton Leftwich Terry was the building's namesake. The building was razed in 1926 and, in its place, in 1927, the Colonial National Bank building was erected.
- 1898 – The Boys' and Girls' Club, originally called the Boys Parlor Association, 23 West Penn Street, Germantown
- 1898 – Robert Early Strawbridge, Jr., Residence, "Meadow Lodge," Bryn Mawr, on the Main Line, which, as described by The New York Times, is a Tudor Country House on 47 acres with gardens, tennis courts, orchard, 17th century English style, half-timbered architecture, carved wood paneling, archways, lead mullioned windows, fire places. The entrance is patterned after Windsor Castle's Great Hall. Thirty-two rooms.
- 1899 – The Charles Currie House at 50 West Walnut Lane in the Tulpehocken Station Historic District, in Philadelphia. The district has been on the National Register of Historic Places since November 26, 1985, and is bounded by on the North by McCallum Street, on the East by West Walnut Lane, on the South by Penn Central railroad tracks, and the West by West Tulpehocken Street, in the Germantown neighborhood, bordering on the Colonial Germantown Historic District, a National Historic Landmark district. This house – named Comawaben – is a Georgian Revival mansion built in local in Wissahickon schist, that closely aligns with the original Georgian style, except for the large size of the building.
- 1902 – James E. Wheeler House, lawyer, 82 Edge Hill Road, New Haven, Connecticut, in the Prospect Hill Historic District. His wife, Edith Pemberton Williams was a 1st cousin of Fielding's wife, Amy Reeve Williams. The house is a 2-story structure with stucco façade.
- 1905 – The Tuleyries, White Post, Virginia – Graham Furber Blandy, a nephew of Mrs. Andrew Carnegie, around 1905, acquired The Tuleyries, near White Post, Virginia, and adjacent lands totaling over 900 acres. Blandy hired Mantle Fielding to restore and improve the mansion. Upon Blandy's death, his widow, Georgette Haven Borland inherited part of the Tuleyries estate. The remainder of the estate was bequeathed to the University of Virginia for an experimental farm. Graham Blandy, his brother, Isaac Cruse Blandy, and Fielding had been students together at the Germantown Academy.
- 1906 – The Page Memorial Chapel, Riverside Cemetery, Oswego, New York. The Chapel was commissioned by descendants of Alanson Sumner Page and Elsie A. Benson. A stone structure, Fielding designed it in a Gothic Revival style. Frederick Wilson, a lead designer of Tiffany Studios of New York City, designed the interior windows. The chapel stands at the entrance of the cemetery. The cemetery, in 1993, was designated on the list of National Register of Historic Places.
- 1915 – Abington YMCA, Abington Township
Published work (chronological)*
AffiliationsFamilyFielding – on November 16, 1898, in Philadelphia – married Amy Reeve Williams. They had two children, Richard Mantle Fielding and Frances, whose husband, Joseph Allison Scott, Jr., was a grandson of U.S. Senator from Pennsylvania, John Scott and nephew of American cricketer Walter Scott. Mantle Fielding and his wife lived in Germantown, Philadelphia, for many years. Fielding, at age, died at his home in Chestnut Hill. His widow, Amy Fielding – on January 7, 1942, in Bala Cynwyd – re-married, to John Duncan Spaeth, an academician.
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