The New York architectural firm of Carrère and Hastings specialized in Beaux-Arts design. The firm established its estimable reputation with the design of one of its earliest works, the Ponce de Leon Hotel at St. Augustine, Florida. Its additional achievements include the New York Public Library at Fifth Avenue and 42nd Street, and the Henry Clay Frick house and Grand Army Plaza, also in Manhattan. The firm's Woodlawn designs include the Borden Memorial (1904) and the Arata (1910) and Julius Stein (1926) mausoleums.
Lutyens was a British architect born in London. He designed his early houses in the informal manner of the English Free School. Lutyens was knighted in 1918, received the Gold Medal of the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) in 1921, and was made president of the Royal Academy in 1938. His Woodlawn work comprises the James Keltas Hackett Monument (1927).
The renowned New York architectural firm of McKim, Mead & White employed the High Renaissance style for many public buildings including the Boston Public Library, and the Knickerbocker Bank and Morgan Library in New York. The firm designed twelve works at Woodlawn including the Goelet (1897), Osborn (1894), Russell (1894) and Taylor (1900) mausoleums and the Wolcott (1906), Twombly (1896) and Whitney (1896) memorials.
Pope was a New York-based architect known for his classical design style. His most distinguished works include the National Archives, National Gallery of Art, and the Jefferson Memorial, all in Washington, D.C. Pope's Woodlawn work comprises the Francis P. Garvan (1930), Leeds (1910), and William C. Stewart (1914) mausoleums.
Some of Rogers's most famous work includes the Gothic designs of the Memorial Quadrangle and Harkness Tower at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut. Among his other works are the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center and the Butler Library of Columbia University in New York; the post office in New Haven, Connecticut; and the Deering Library of Northwestern University in Chicago. His Woodlawn work includes the Edward Harkness Chapel Mausoleum (1924), the Straus (1928) and James N. Hill (1930) mausoleums and the Millie S. Kuhn Memorial (1938).
Among Trowbridge's commissions were the B. Altman Building in New York, the Palace Hotel in San Francisco and the Mellon National Bank in Pittsburgh. Trowbridge's firm designed his Woodlawn memorial (1925), and the William Porter (1927) and Lynn (1924) mausoleums.