
Longmeadow, a west Lake Forest estate for Joseph Histed, was designed by Garden and his firm in 1906.
Hugh Garden rebuilt this house at 550 E. Deerpath for Charles Dyer and Katherine Garrison Norton in 1906 after their previous residence, the original 1859 home of Lake Forest founder Sylvester Lind, burned in a fire.
Longmeadow, a west Lake Forest estate for Joseph Histed, was designed by Garden and his firm in 1906.
Canadian Hugh M. G. Garden first arrived in Chicago in the 1880s, where he apprenticed as a draftsman working for Howard Van Doren Shaw, Louis Sullivan and Frank Lloyd Wright among others. In 1895, he partnered with Richard Schmidt to form Schmidt and Garden. Their commissions were primarily commercial and public park buildings. Edgar Martin joined the firm in 1906.
Significant buildings include the Montgomery Ward warehouse and the Ambassador Hotel. By 1926, Martin left the group and Carl A. Erickson became a new partner. Later work included the Julia C. Lathrop Homes.
Hugh Garden's creative use of ornament was distinctive enough to merit the descriptor "Gardenesque.” He was known for his delicate sense of proportion.
Some local commissions include: