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Gwin Dudley Home Site, also known as Twin Chimneys, is a historic home site located at Smith Mountain Lake, Wirtz, Franklin County, Virginia.The site consists of two extant stone chimneys that are situated 31 feet, 8 inches apart (inside face to inside face), indicating the length of the house, which was lost to fire in the early 20th century.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in the independent city of Winchester, Virginia, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in an online map.
Amherst Street, Dr. William P. McGuire House & Office, 120 & 124 Amherst Street, Winchester, Winchester, VA: 8 data pages at Historic American Buildings Survey; Amherst Street, Edward McGuire House, 103 North Braddock Street, Winchester, Winchester, VA: 6 data pages at Historic American Buildings Survey
The marker of Dudley Woodbridge, who was just 7 when he passed in 1771, was propped along a wall by the cemetery along Dorsey Avenue. "I was intrigued, " Williams said.
An 1856 oil painting of Winchester by Edward Beyer Map of Winchester, Virginia, and the surrounding Frederick County (Winchester is independent of the county but is the county seat). Winchester is located at 39°10′41″N 78°10′01″W / 39.178°N 78.167°W / 39.178; -78
White and Salt Sulphur Springs Turnpike BPW 653 (on 1848 map) bridge west of White Sulphur Springs, WV to Salt Sulphur Springs, WV (1833-1834) Williamsport Turnpike BPW 654 (not in main list) Williamstown, WV to Northwestern Turnpike (1848-49 ch. 194) Wilson Creek and South Fork Turnpike BPW 655. mouth of Wilson Creek to Seven Mile Ford (1852 ...
The Bunker Hill Historic District is the center of the town of Bunker Hill, West Virginia. Today located on the road called US 11, the town was developed along the Martinsburg, West Virginia - Winchester, Virginia road. Bunker Hill served southern Berkeley County with three stores, six mills, and five churches.
The Dudley Digges House is a historical building in Yorktown, Virginia [1] built around 1760. [2] It is named for the owner, Dudley Digges , who was elected lieutenant governor of the Commonwealth of Virginia during the American Revolution but captured by the British before he could take office.