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The Joaquin Miller House, also known as The Abbey, is a historic house in Joaquin Miller Park, a public park in the Oakland Hills area of Oakland, California, United States. A crude, vaguely Gothic structure, it was the home of poet Joaquin Miller from 1886 until his death in 1913. Miller was one of the nation's first poets to write about the ...
ref. # 100005158 this is not a good picture but the home is surrounded by a tall shut gate and a high wall which i had to climb to get this picture through abundant foliage. the house is located at 2311 north indian canyon drive
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722 Elm Drive was last sold in November 2001 to telecommunications executive Sam Delug for $3.743 million. If you thought that was eerie, check out the house where serial killer Jeffery Dahmer ...
The house was built as part of the Harper Tract developed by Miller & Herriott. In 1888, the two developers bought a 25-acre (100,000 m 2) piece of land west of Hoover Street, between the prestigious West Adams district to the north and the nascent University of Southern California to the south. They subdivided the land into 98 lots, building ...
Miller's death is the first known fatal attack by a black bear in California. Grizzly bears, which are featured on the state flag and are known to be more aggressive than black bears, haven't been ...
The house was built around 1790 by Miller, son of Cornelius Muller, whose brick Dutch house on the other side of Claverack is also listed on the Register. The younger man was among the first merchants in the community to set up shop on the east side, selling dry goods and buying or accepting as barter ash from recently cleared farmland to extract potash from.
It is a well-preserved example of early 20th century Tudor Revival houses. It was built in 1915 and designed by Columbus firm Richards, McCarty & Bulford in the Tudor Revival style. [1] [2] The house was built for Frederick A. Miller, president of the H.C. Godman Co., the city's first and largest shoe manufacturer.