Sadly, in the pursuit of my research, I have learned of at least two examples of the demolition of Lawrie's works, in a museum and in a bank.
Officials at the Wichita Art Institute who helped me with my research indicated that there was an expansion to the building in the 1960s, whereby the terrace was enclosed in the building. Having never seen this building, I cannot yet describe it further, only to say that it is presumed that these works, showing figures of American Indians engaged in carving stone columns, or sculpting thunderbirds, weaving both textiles and blankets, making beads, throwing pottery, and building with stone, are forever lost.
The Bank of Hawaii in Honolulu was once housed in a building designed by Goodhue and decorated with sculpture by Lawrie. An ancient trade journal holds the only known image of a bas-relief, The Seiners, which may very well have perished in the 1960s, when the Bank demolished the old bank to build a new one...
Whether any other of Lawries works have been similarly lost, remains a mystery at this writing.