Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Hooper–Lee–Nichols House is an historic Colonial American house in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Initially constructed in 1685 and enlarged and remodeled many times thereafter, it is located at 159 Brattle Street in Cambridge. It is the second-oldest house in the city (after the Cooper–Frost–Austin House, c. 1681–1682). The house is ...
James E. Hooper House was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982. [1] In 2001, the building was purchased by Morphius Development Consortium, who returned the exterior wood trim to its original green color and restored other various interior features, including multiple pocket doors and hand cut decorative wooden wall panels.
The Terhune–Hopper House is located at 825 East Saddle River Road in the borough of Ho-Ho-Kus in Bergen County, New Jersey, United States.The historic stone house was built in 1790 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 10, 1983, for its significance in architecture.
The Hooper House, also known as Hooper House II, located in Bare Hills in Baltimore County, Maryland, was commissioned by philanthropist Edith Hooper, and designed by architects Marcel Breuer and Herbert Beckhard. Breuer had designed an addition to the Hoopers' prior home in Baltimore in 1948; that home is often referred to as "Hooper House I ...
Ten months after her marriage imploded, the ‘Selling Sunset’ alum gave PEOPLE an exclusive look at her new home and revealed how she’s adjusting to life out of the realty TV spotlight
Undoubtedly, the two-story Presidential Suite is the pinnacle of luxury at Palm House. Featuring nearly 2,000 square feet of refined living space, this suite includes one bedroom and 1.5 bathrooms.
Stuart Mines denied raping a woman who went to his house for Sunday lunch [BBC] An off-duty police officer raped a woman at his home after meeting her through a dating website, a court has heard.
The Terhune–Hopper House is located at 349 West Saddle River Road in the borough of Upper Saddle River in Bergen County, New Jersey, United States.The historic stone house was built around 1781 by tradition, perhaps later by architectural evidence.