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The Miller house was meant to be a year-round residence, rather than just a vacation home. [10] The Millers wanted a home in which they could entertain heads of state and titans of industry. [11] At about 6,838 square feet, [8] the Miller House is one of very few single family homes that Saarinen designed. [3] The Miller House epitomizes the ...
The Miller's House at Spring Mill is an historic, American building that is located in the Spring Mill section of Whitemarsh, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, United States. Located roughly two hundred feet (61 m) from where Spring Mill Creek empties into the Schuylkill River , it is situated approximately a quarter of a mile (402 m) southeast ...
The following other wikis use this file: Usage on es.wikipedia.org Casa Miller; Usage on fr.wikipedia.org Discussion Wikipédia:Wikiconcours/mars 2019/Équipes/Équipe 15
Miller's House at Spring Mill (c.1770), North Lane, south of East Hector Street. NRHP-listed. [2] The now-demolished gristmill stood east of the house, along Spring Mill Creek. Spring Mill Café, 164 Barren Hill Road. Housed in an 1831 former general store. [5] Lee Tire and Rubber Company (1909), 1100 East Hector Street. NRHP-listed. [2]
Miller died in 1945, and his wife remarried, rarely used the house while living in New York, and sold it in 1950. From that year until 1983, the Monastery of Discalced Carmelite Nuns owned and occupied the building; afterward it became a private residence once again.
North Carolina officials determined Mica Miller committed suicide on April 27. There’s video of her buying a gun before driving from Myrtle Beach to a North Carolina state park.
This mill was built in 1793 by Michael and Chatharina Gunkle. It is a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story, banked stone structure with a gable roof.Also located on the property are a contributing 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story, stuccoed stone miller's house, a one-story stone spring house, a one-story stone smokehouse, and a one-story stone carriage house.
By the last years of the 19th century, he had become prosperous enough to build the present house, which was constructed in 1890. He remained in business into the 20th century; in 1904, a city directory called him Cincinnati's oldest living funeral director. [4] Miller chose a prestigious architect to design his house: the firm of Samuel Hannaford.