Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Capt. Jack C. Hardy House is a historic house on a former stud farm in Brookhaven, Mississippi. It was designed in the Italianate architectural style , and built with red bricks by Captain J. A. Hoskins in 1877. [ 2 ]
Also known as Longwood Estate - Smith House [4] 38: Smith-Rourke House: Smith-Rourke House: November 28, 1989 : 350 South Country Road: East Patchogue: 39: St. Andrew's Episcopal Church: St. Andrew's Episcopal Church
The Paxton House is a historic house near Brookhaven, Mississippi. It was built as a dogtrot house in 1831 by Benjamin Paxton, and extended in 1858. [2] Paxton lived here with his wife, née Frances Lofton. He owned more than 1013 acres, and he died in 1872. [2] The house was inherited by his descendants. [2]
Goodwin House. The Solomon Goodwin House was located at 3931 Peachtree Road in Brookhaven, Georgia, 0.5 miles (0.80 km) east of Atlanta city limits. Dating back to 1831, it was the oldest building still standing in DeKalb County, Georgia and the oldest building "Inside the Perimeter". The home once headed up a 600-acre (240 ha) farm. [2]
The original owner was R. T. Scherck, who started his career by working for his father, an immigrant from Germany, at A. Scherck & Son. [4] Scherck lived at the R.T. Scherck House. He named the hotel for his daughter, Inez Lenore Pass Scherck. [3] The building was acquired by David Gilly in the early 1910s, followed by D.A. Biglane in 1945. [5]
A four-room house, also known as an "Israelite house" or a "pillared house" is the name given to the mud and stone houses characteristic of the Iron Age of Levant. The four-room house is so named because its floor plan is divided into four sections, although not all four are proper rooms, one often being an unroofed courtyard .
Historic Brookhaven is a historic neighborhood, part of which lies in Atlanta's Buckhead Community, part of which lies in Sandy Springs, Georgia, ...
The Miles Brewton House is a National Historic Landmark residential complex located in Charleston, South Carolina.It is one of the finest examples of a double house (a reference to the arrangement of four main rooms per floor, separated by a central stair hall) in Charleston, designed on principles articulated by Andrea Palladio.