Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Leo_M._J._Dielmann> ?p ?o }
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann abstract "Leo Maria Joseph Dielmann (August 14, 1881 - December 21, 1969) was a prominent and prolific architect in Texas. He designed over 100 churches, with several of them, along with other buildings, now listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places.Dielmann was born in San Antonio, Texas to John C. Dielmann, a German immigrant, and Maria (Gros) Dielmann, the daughter of immigrants. His father was a stonemason who joined a construction and supply business, Pauly and Dielmann. An active Catholic layman, he was elected the first president of the St. Joseph's Society of St. Joseph's R.C. Church and then served as first president of the Deutsch Roemisch Katholischer Staatsverband von Texas (the Catholic State League of Texas).Leo M.J. Dielmann graduated from St Mary's College in San Antonio in 1898. Afterwards he studied architecture and engineering in Germany from about 1899 to 1901, including a visit to the Exposition Universelle (1900) in Paris that showcased Art Nouveau in art and architecture. He returned to spend three years in his father's business, before setting up his own practice.Like his father, Dielmann was a leading Catholic layman, as a member of the St. Joseph's Society of St. Joseph's R.C. Church, the Knights of Columbus, Order of Alhambra, San Antonio Liederkranz, the Beethoven Männerchor, and as president of the Harmonia Lodge of the Sons of Hermann. He also served as a city council member in San Antonio in 1913 and 1914, and was a long-time member of the San Antonio Public Library board of Trustees.In 1926, Deilmann completed Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church on San Antonio's West Side to serve its Mexican-American population. The red brick building is Romanesque, with strong elements of the Lombardy style.Dielmann's work included more than 100 church buildings from Houston to Marshall to Amarillo, but mostly across South Texas, as well as hundreds of commercial buildings, hotels, schools, and houses. His 12-story Frost Bank Building erected in 1922 was restored in 1994 to become the Municipal Plaza Building, housing the City Council chambers and city offices.Dielmann married Ella Marie Wagner, a daughter of German emigres, on April 25, 1911, and they had three children. He died on December 21, 1969, at the age of eighty-eight, and is buried in Holy Cross Cemetery in San Antonio.Notable works include:The Fairmount Hotel, 401 S. Alamo San Antonio, Texas, NRHP-listed Conventual Chapel at Our Lady of the Lake University, 411 S.W. 24th St., San Antonio, Texas, Gothic Revival style, built 1923LaBorde House, Store and Hotel, 601 E. Main St., Rio Grande City, Texas, NRHP-listedMonastery of Our Lady of Charity, 1900 Montana, San Antonio, Texas, Italianate and Gothic architecture, NRHP-listedNativity of Mary, Blessed Virgin Catholic Church, FM 2672, High Hill, Texas, built 1906, NRHP-listedOur Lady of Lourdes Church, 105 N. William St., Victoria, Texas, Romanesque Revival style, NRHP-listedPark Hotel, known as the Plaza Hotel since 1919, 217 S. River St., Seguin, Texas, NRHP-listed, opened 1917Post Chapel (Fort Sam Houston), Bldg. 2200, Wilson St., San Antonio, Texas, NRHP-listedSacred Heart Catholic Church, 1633 S. Eighth St. Abilene, Texas, NRHP-listedSt. Mary's Catholic Church, 306 W. San Antonio St., Fredericksburg, Texas, gothic-inspired native stone structure, NRHP-listedSt. Mary's Catholic Church, 701 Church St., Brenham, Texas, built 1935, NRHP-listedSt. James Catholic Church, 507 S. Camp St., Seguin, Texas, Gothic Revival style in red brick, built 1914Hermann Sons Grand Lodge, 515 S. St. Mary's St., San Antonio, Art Deco style, built in 1938The Barr Building, 213–19 Broadway, San Antonio, Texas, built in 1912.↑ 1.0 1.1 ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 7.7 7.8 7.9 ↑ ↑".
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann birthDate "1881-08-14".
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann birthPlace San_Antonio.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann birthYear "1881".
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann deathDate "1969-12-21".
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann deathPlace San_Antonio.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann deathYear "1969".
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann thumbnail St._Marys_Catholic_Church_(Fredericksburg,_Texas).jpg?width=300.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageExternalLink drt-00011.html.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageID "32532330".
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageLength "7457".
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageOutDegree "49".
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageRevisionID "607864108".
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Abilene,_Texas.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Architect.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Art_Nouveau.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Brenham,_Texas.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Category:1881_births.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Category:1969_deaths.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Category:American_architects.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Category:NRHP_architects.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_from_San_Antonio,_Texas.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Catholic_State_League_of_Texas.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Exposition_Universelle_(1900).
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Fairmount_Hotel_(San_Antonio,_Texas).
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Fredericksburg,_Texas.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Gothic_Revival_architecture.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink High_Hill,_Texas.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Knights_of_Columbus.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink LaBorde_House,_Store_and_Hotel.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Monastery_of_Our_Lady_of_Charity.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink National_Register_of_Historic_Places.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Nativity_of_Mary,_Blessed_Virgin_Catholic_Church.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Order_of_Alhambra.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Our_Lady_of_Lourdes_Church.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Our_Lady_of_the_Lake_University.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Park_Hotel_(Seguin,_Texas).
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Post_Chapel_(Fort_Sam_Houston).
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Rio_Grande_City,_Texas.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Sacred_Heart_Catholic_Church_(Abilene,_Texas).
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink San_Antonio.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink San_Antonio_Public_Library.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Seguin,_Texas.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Sons_of_Hermann.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink St._James_Catholic_Church_(Seguin,_Texas).
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink St._Marys_Catholic_Church_(Brenham,_Texas).
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink St._Marys_Catholic_Church_(Fredericksburg,_Texas).
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink St._Marys_University,_Texas.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink Victoria,_Texas.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink File:Blessed_virgin_catholic_church_2008.jpg.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLink File:St._Marys_Catholic_Church_(Fredericksburg,_Texas).jpg.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLinkText "Dielmann, Leo M. J.".
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageWikiLinkText "Leo M. J. Dielmann".
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann birthDate "1881-08-14".
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann birthName "Leo Maria Joseph Dielmann".
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann birthPlace San_Antonio.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann dateOfBirth "1881-08-14".
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann dateOfDeath "1969-12-21".
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann deathDate "1969-12-21".
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann deathPlace San_Antonio.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann father "John Charles Dielmann".
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann mother "Maria Dielmann".
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann name "Dielmann, Leo M.J.".
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann name "Leo M.J. Dielmann".
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann nationality "American".
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann placeOfBirth San_Antonio.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann placeOfDeath San_Antonio.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann shortDescription "Architect".
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Birth_date.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Commons_category-inline.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Death_date_and_age.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_architect.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Persondata.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann description "Architect".
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann description "Architect".
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann subject Category:1881_births.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann subject Category:1969_deaths.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann subject Category:American_architects.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann subject Category:NRHP_architects.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann subject Category:People_from_San_Antonio,_Texas.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann hypernym Architect.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann type Agent.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann type Architect.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann type Artist.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann type Person.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann type Person.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann type Artist.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann type Agent.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann type NaturalPerson.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann type Thing.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann type Q215627.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann type Q5.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann type Person.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann comment "Leo Maria Joseph Dielmann (August 14, 1881 - December 21, 1969) was a prominent and prolific architect in Texas. He designed over 100 churches, with several of them, along with other buildings, now listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places.Dielmann was born in San Antonio, Texas to John C. Dielmann, a German immigrant, and Maria (Gros) Dielmann, the daughter of immigrants. His father was a stonemason who joined a construction and supply business, Pauly and Dielmann.".
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann label "Leo M. J. Dielmann".
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann sameAs Q6524008.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann sameAs m.0h1h1vr.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann sameAs Q6524008.
- Leo_M._J._Dielmann wasDerivedFrom Leo_M._J._Dielmann?oldid=607864108.