- William G. Distin
William G. Distin (1884–1970), an architect of
Saranac Lake, New York was an early associate ofGreat Camp designerWilliam L. Coulter who went on to design a number ofAdirondack Great Camps .Born in Plattsburgh, his family moved to Saranac Lake in 1889. After graduation from
Saranac Lake High School in 1900, he was hired by William Coulter as a draftsman; his apprenticeship lasted six or seven years. After Coulter's death in 1907, Distin attendedColumbia University , graduating in 1910. After a short period inChicago , working forS. S. Beekman designing houses, he traveled for a time in Europe. Returning to Saranac Lake about 1912, he joined the successor to Coulter's architectural firm, run byMax Westhoff , Coulter's former partner. In 1917, Distin worked for the Army building hospitals inWashington, DC . After the war, he returned to Saranac Lake to reopen Westhoff's firm, the latter having moved toSpringfield, Massachusetts .After some smaller commissions for camps on
Upper Saranac Lake , he designedCamp Wonundra forWilliam Rockefeller in 1934. In 1937 he built "Eagle Nest" at Blue Mountain Lake for Walter Hochschild, and in 1948, Camp Minnowbrook, in the same area, for R.M. Hollingshead. There were also seven smaller great camps on Lake Placid, and work on theLake Placid Club .Distin also designed a number of notable churches, including
St. John’s in the Wilderness Episcopal Church in Paul Smiths, Saint Barnards Catholic Church in Saranac Lake, Saint Eustace Episcopal Church in Lake Placid, and the Island Chapel, onUpper Saranac Lake . He also designed the replacement of the originalAdirondack Loj , which burned in a catastrophic fire that swept Essex County in 1903.ources
* Gilborn, Craig. "Adirondack Camps: Homes Away from Home, 1850-1950". Blue Mountain Lake, NY: Adirondack Museum; Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 2000.
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