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Jules Gabriel Henri de Sibour (December 23, 1872 – November 4, 1938) was a French architect who worked in Washington, DC. Early life.
The residence, built in 1910, was designed by the French-born American architect Jules Henri de Sibour for William Watson Lawrence (1859-1916), [4] a paint and white lead manufacturer. [3] It was later the home of the mining millionaire John Hays Hammond.
It was designed by Jules Henri de Sibour and built in the French style of Louis XIV. Stewart died in 1912 and his widow lived in the building until her death in 1931. In 1941, her daughter sold it to Grand Duchess Charlotte of Luxembourg who was then in exile due to the German occupation of her country in the Second World War.
Jules Henri de Sibour designed the building, which was completed in 1906. [2] It was listed on the District of Columbia Inventory of Historic Sites, on November 8, 1964. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1991.
Oxon Hill Manor is a neo-Georgian house of 49 rooms, located at Forest Heights, Prince George's County, Maryland.It was designed in 1928 for Sumner Welles (1892-1961) by the Washington architect, Jules Henri de Sibour (1872-1938).
The building was designed by prominent Washington architect Jules Henri de Sibour in the Classical Revival style with elements of the Chicago School. [2] The nine-story structure occupies a corner lot. The exterior of the building is faced with ornamented marble and glazed terra cotta with textured spandrels.
The building was designed by Jules Henri de Sibour. Beriah Wilkins lived there; he married Emily Wilkins. Their son John F. Wilkins inherited the property in 1910. He married Julia C. Wilkins; they entertained there.
Valerie Stirling Prochnik (1916–2006), who married Jean Raymond Louis De Sibour, a son of Viscount Jules Henri de Sibour, in 1936. [ 15 ] [ 16 ] They divorced and she married Thomas Rush Ragland Jr. in 1968.