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Garraty, John A. Henry Cabot Lodge: A Biography (1953). Graebner, Norman A., and Edward M. Bennett, eds. The Versailles Treaty and its legacy: the failure of the Wilsonian vision (Cambridge UP, 2011). Gross, Leo, "The Charter of the United Nations and the Lodge Reservations." American Journal of International Law 41.3 (1947): 531-554. in JSTOR
The couple lived there until 1908. After World War I, the residence was made a casino of the French army, and then a summer location of the Palast Hotel in Wiesbaden. [1] Around 1920, the Landkreis Essen started running a home for children, Kinderheim Taunusblick, in Schloss Freudenberg, which was later run by Essen, and closed in 1931.
Aerial photo of the Schloßplatz in Wiesbaden with the Stadtschloss (left) and the New Town Hall (right) The Schlossplatz (Palace Square or Castle Square) forms the center of the historic Old Town of Wiesbaden, Hesse, Germany. It gets its name from the Stadtschloss, the royal residence of the Dukes of Nassau located on the north side of the square.
As one of those, who were unsatisfied with this Rite, Johann Wilhelm Kellner von Zinnendorf wrote to the Grand Lodge in London, asking for a patent to establish a new Lodge. However the London Grand Lodge declined, as there were already a great number of Masonic Lodges and Grand Lodges in existence in Berlin at that time.
Wiesbaden City Palace Yellow salon. Wiesbaden City Palace [1] (German: Stadtschloss Wiesbaden or Wiesbadener Stadtschloss) is a neo-classical building in the center of Wiesbaden, Germany. It was completed in 1841 as the principal city residence of the Dukes of Nassau. The palace has several wings, 145 rooms, and is architecturally integrated ...
Westend is a borough of the city of Wiesbaden, Hesse, Germany. With a density of about 27,000 inhabitants per km² it is the most densely populated urban district in Germany. It is located in the centre of the city.
Unlike other Prussian regions the Wiesbaden Region was not only an administrative entity of the Prussian government, but its pertaining counties formed a body, the Bezirksverband Nassau or Wiesbaden (about: regional association), [1] with its own representative assembly (Nassauischer Kommunallandtag Wiesbaden, i.e. Nassau Communal Diet, existed between 1866 and 1933) and premises provided and ...
Wiesbaden's spielbank (casino) can be seen behind a fountain of the Bowling Green. The Bowling Green is a rectangular space with two pools and a three-shell fountain in the middle. On the east side of the Bowling Green, the park connects to the Kurhausplatz, a square in front of the historic Kurhaus of Wiesbaden.