Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Exeter was a late 18th-century Georgian house near Leesburg, Virginia, that was listed on the National Register of Historic Places from 1973 to August 1980, when it was destroyed by fire and subsequently de-listed from the National Register. The house and its dependencies were unusually elaborate for northern Virginia.
Map of Virginia. Buildings, sites, districts, and objects in Virginia listed on the National Register of Historic Places: . As of September 18, 2017, there are 3,027 properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in all 95 Virginia counties and 37 of the 38 independent cities, including 120 National Historic Landmarks and National Historic Landmark Districts, four ...
Rediscover Church Exeter St David's [47] 1928 Elim: Renamed 2016. Planted to Plymouth 2011 City Life Church Exeter St David's [48] 2012 Independent St Lawrence, Exeter St Loyes Lawrence: post-WW2 Church of England: Heavitree Parish [12] Named after city centre St Lawrence's destroyed in WW2 Holy Trinity, Exeter St Loyes [49] Trinity: 2003 ...
This Wise County, Virginia state location article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
22 Bayley Lane (also known as The Cottage) is a grade II* listed building and only remaining mediaeval timber framed building in the Cathedral Quarter area of Coventry, where there were at one time a great many. [1]
Newtown is an area of Exeter between St Sidwells and Heavitree and was traditionally an area for the poor since Saxon times. A workhouse was built in 1671 on a site currently used as a car park, but Newtown remained largely rural up until the 19th century. Around 1700 a new workhouse was built on what is now the site of Heavitree Hospital.
38–39 Bayley Lane: 38–39 is one of a row of buildings on Bayley Lane destroyed during the Coventry Blitz. The cellar is all that remains and is accessible from Herbert Art Gallery and Museum . Drapers' Hall : Opened in 1832, the Hall represents at least the third belonging to the Drapers Company on Bayley Lane, the area having been a ...
Park Avenue Christian Church, New York City, 1911; Church of the Covenant in the University Circle neighborhood of Cleveland, Ohio, 1911; Cathedral of St. John the Divine, New York City, design taken over by Cram in 1911, unfinished; All Souls Congregational Church, Bangor, Maine, 1912