Sanguinet & Staats was an architecture firm formed in 1903 by Marshall R. Sanguinet, who had practiced in Fort Worth since 1883, and Carl G. Staats, a draftsman who had worked for James Riely Gordon. The firm established its original office in Fort Worth and later expanded with offices in five Texas cities: Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, Waco, and Wichita Falls. Sanguinet & Staats also took on various partners over time. In 1903, the Dallas office sprung from a new partnership called Sanguinet, Staats and Hill, which operated for two years under that name until Charles D. Hill left the firm. In 1922, architect Wyatt C. Hedrick joined and it became Sanguinet, Staats, and Hedrick. In turn, this firm added R.D. Gottlieb as a limited partner for just the Houston office, forming Sanguinet, Staats, Hedrick, and Gottlieb. Sanguinet and Staats retired in 1926 after selling their shares to Hedrick.
Works
Although Sanguinet and Staats designed various kinds of buildings, the firm's main business was the design and construction of tall, street-framed office buildings. Works include:
Agricultural Pavilion, 1925, with architects Wyatt C. Hedrick; Sanguinet, Staats, and Hedrick; William Ward Watkin.
ALICO Building, built in 1910 by the architectural firm Sanguinet & Staats with associate architect Roy Lane, for the Amicable Life Insurance
Neil P. Anderson Building, 411 W. 7th St. Fort Worth, Texas NRHP-listed
Stephen F. Austin Elementary School, 319 Lipscomb St., Fort Worth, Texas NRHP-listed
James L. Autry House, 5 Courtlandt Pl., Houston, Texas NRHP-listed
William J. Bryce House, 4900 Bryce Ave., Fort Worth, Texas NRHP-listed
Burk Burnett Building, 500—502 Main St., Fort Worth, Texas NRHP-listed
Carter Building, 806 Main St., Houston, Texas
A. S. Cleveland House, 8 Courtlandt Pl., Houston, Texas NRHP-listed
John M. Dorrance House, 9 Courtlandt Pl., Houston, Texas NRHP-listed
Eighth Avenue Historic District, Bounded by 8th Ave., Pennsylvania Ave., 9th Ave., and Pruitt St., Fort Worth, Texas NRHP-listed
Flatiron Building, 1000 Houston St., Fort Worth, Texas NRHP-listed
Franklin Lofts, designed by architect Sanguinet and Staats
Great Jones Building, with which Sanguinet & Staats is believed to be associated
Hotel Texas, 815 Main St., Fort Worth, Texas NRHP-listed
Knights of Pythias Building, 315 Main St., Fort Worth, Texas restored 1981, designed by architect Sanguinet & Staats, 1901; renovated Thomas E. Woodward & Associates, 1988 NRHP-listed
Our Lady of Victory Academy, 801 W. Shaw St., Fort Worth, Texas NRHP-listed
Palestine High School, 400 Micheaux Ave., Palestine, Texas NRHP-listed
Paul Building, 1018 Preston Ave., Houston, Texas NRHP-listed
Sam Houston Hotel, 1117 Prairie St., Houston, Texas NRHP-listed
San Jacinto Building, designed by the firm Sanguinet, Staats, and Gottlieb.
Marshall R. Sanguinet House, 4729 Collinwood Ave., Fort Worth, Texas NRHP-listed
Scarbrough Building, 500 block, Congress Ave., Austin, Texas
South Main Baptist Church, designed in 1924 by Sanguinet, Staats, Hedrick and Gottlieb
St. Mary of the Assumption Church, Texas, built 1923, designed by architect Sanguinet, Staats & Hedrick, architecture Romanesque, Romanesque Revival. NRHP-listed