For the Australian-British screenwriter and producer and founder of Millar/Gough Ink, see
Miles Millar.
American architect
Miles Miller (April 8, 1896 in Salt Lake City, Utah – March 28, 1956[1]) was a 20th-century architect in Utah. He was a graduate of Latter Day Saint University and the University of Utah. He worked in a firm with Clifford Percy Evans and Taylor Woolley between 1917–1922 in Salt Lake City, Utah. Two of his works, the Parowan 3rd Ward Meetinghouse (1914)[2] and Central Park Ward Chapel (1927),[3] represent Prairie School architecture. He also designed the Carbon Stake Tabernacle which was completed in 1914 (demolished 1981).[4]
Several of his works are listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP).
Works
- Parowan 3rd Ward Meetinghouse (1914)
- Carbon Stake Tabernacle (1914)
- Central Park Ward Chapel (1927)
- Mesquite High School Gymnasium (1939), in Mesquite, Nevada, (Miller, Miles M.), NRHP-listed
- L.D.S. Ward Building (1933), 187 S. 2nd Ave., Lava Hot Springs, ID. Tudor Revival (Miller, Miles), NRHP-listed
- Lava High School Gymnasium, 202 W. Fife, Lava Hot Springs, ID (Miller, Miles E.), NRHP-listed
- Overton Gymnasium, N. West Thomas St. W of jct. with S. Anderson St., Overton, NV (Miller, Miles), NRHP-listed
Notes