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House at 202 N. Main St., formerly 36 N. Main St., is a frame Italianate house with vinyl siding before date of NRHP listing. The historic district boundaries now includes some newer structures. A small house, possibly a single-wide , at what is now 201 N. Main St., in between what were 35 and 37 N. Main St., is apparently an infill built after ...
The Phillip Gaensslen House is a historic house in Cleveland, Ohio, United States, located at 3050 Prospect Avenue east of downtown. Built in about 1870, the Italianate house features a primarily brick exterior and a stone foundation. [ 3 ]
The Alpheus Gay House is a historic house at 184 Myrtle Street in Manchester, New Hampshire. Built c. 1870 by Alpheus Gay, a local building contractor, it is one of the state's most elaborate Italianate houses. The house was owned for a time by the nearby Currier Gallery of Art, but is now in private hands.
The Harbison House is a 4-bed, 4-and-a-half bath, 4,000-square-foot, Victorian Italianate home built in 1870 in Shelbyville. Take a peek inside.
Osborne House on the Isle of Wight, England, built between 1845 and 1851. It exhibits three typical Italianate features: a prominently bracketed cornice, towers based on Italian campanili and belvederes, and adjoining arched windows. [1] The Italianate style was a distinct 19th-century phase in the history of Classical architecture.
The house was built about 1870, and consists of a two-story, hexagonal Italianate Revival style central section with three Greek Revival style one-story wings in a "Y"-plan. Also on the property are a double pen log barn, a log corn crib, a log granary, and a frame well house. [2] It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1984 ...
They were all built in 1870 using the same Italianate design by Philadelphia architect John Stewart. They were listed on the National Register of Historic Places on November 20, 1979. [1] Stewart bought the lots in 1870, while he, according to the deed, took out a $61,000 loan for construction of the buildings.
Bowles came from Missouri to the Colorado Territory at age 17. In 1871, at about 24 years of age he married Mahala, and they homesteaded the land on which the house stands. Bowles was the second pioneer settler in the area, after Pleasant DeSpain who arrived in 1870 and whose farm was to the north of the Bowles House. [2]