Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
On October 18, 1983, [9] a middle-aged couple gathering wild mushrooms discovered two partially buried human skulls alongside an oak tree close to an abandoned farmhouse in Lake Village, Indiana. [10] The couple immediately reported their discovery to authorities. [4] Indiana State Police investigators at the abandoned Lake Village farmhouse ...
Wikidata has entry Village Farmhouse Incorporating Post Office (Q26534996) with data related to this item. Licensing.
Marion Carll Farm is a historic home and property located in Commack, Suffolk County, New York.It consists of the 1860 farmhouse, privy, garage, smokehouse, milk house, horse barn/carriage house, sheep barn, and four smaller barns.
The parish contains the village of Hunmanby, and the surrounding countryside. Most of the listed buildings are houses, cottages and associated structures, and the others include a church, a memorial in the churchyard, a market cross, farmhouses and farm buildings, an animal pound , a village lock-up , a public house, a war memorial and a ...
It encompasses the largely intact 19th and early 20th century residential and commercial core of the village. The earliest extant building is the Willis farmhouse, dated to the early 19th century. The district's commercial center is Station Plaza, located at the 19th century railroad station .
The village was incorporated in 1869. Chatham was originally named Groats Corners. The village is the home of the 1814 Blinn-Pulver Farmhouse.. Chatham hosts a variety of attractions, such as the Crandell Theater, which shows many popular movies at very reasonable prices.
It was built between 1849 and 1851 and is a five-by-three-bay, 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story, substantial frame farmhouse. It features a 1-story porch across the front elevation that incorporates six Doric order columns and a dentiled cornice. It was the home of John Stevens (1803–1882), founder of Mount Vernon. [2]
Harvey S. Firestone 's family farmhouse from Columbiana, Ohio, which was given to the Village by Harvey's two remaining sons in 1983 to perpetuate their father's memory. The disassembling and rebuilding process took over two years, and the farm has been operated as a working sheep farm since 1985.