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The Lanier Mansion is a historic house located at 601 West First Street in the Madison Historic District of Madison, Indiana.Built by wealthy banker James F. D. Lanier in 1844, the house was declared a State Memorial in 1926.
The Lanier Mansion was the former home of James Lanier, who lent money to governor Oliver P. Morton to run the Indiana state government to circumvent the legislative process between 1862 and 1865. The Shrewsbury-Windle House was built for steamboat captain Charles Shrewsbury, who would later become a mayor of Madison.
These include the Lanier Mansion, the Shrewsbury-Windle House, and Costigan’s home on West Third Street in downtown Madison. ... Admission is free for Historic Madison Foundation, Inc. members ...
James Lanier was born in 1800 in Beaufort County, North Carolina, to Alexander Chalmers Sr. (1778–1820) and Drusilla Cleaves Doughty (died 1838).His home was in Bourbon county Kentucky from 1802 to 1807 and then in Eaton Ohio until 1817, when his family moved to Madison, Indiana, [1] the year after it became a state and lived at Schofield House.
The Madison Historic District showcases architecture from 1817 to 1939, having many buildings in Federal, Greek Revival and Italianate styles. Infrastructure and houses remain from the 19th century, related to leaders of the Underground Railroad.
The James F. D. Lanier House in New York City was built in the early 20th century but features modern touches like an in-house spa and hot tub. A decadent $33 million Gilded Age mansion is on sale ...
Lanier Mansion Francis Costigan House Francis Costigan (March 4, 1810 – April 18, 1865) was an Indiana architect known primarily for his work in Madison, Indiana and Indianapolis .
James F.D. Lanier 1800-1881 [3] 1963 511 First at the Elm Street junction near the Ohio River at the Lanier Mansion State Historic Site in Madison: Military, Business, Industry, and Labor First Chartered Bank in Indiana [4] 1966