Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
For Spanish Gothic, Renaissance, and Baroque Revival style architecture in Florida see: Category: Spanish Revival architecture in Florida. Subcategories.
Spanish Colonial Revival architecture in Florida. Pages in category "Spanish Revival architecture in Florida" The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 total.
Embraced principally in Florida and California, the Spanish Colonial Revival movement enjoyed its greatest popularity between 1915 and 1931. In Mexico, the Spanish Colonial Revival in architecture was tied to the nationalist movement in the arts encouraged by the post–Mexican Revolution government.
The Paredes-Dodge House is located at 54 St. George Street in St. Augustine, Florida. The one and a half story structure was built between 1803 and 1813, and is one of the only surviving colonial structures in St. Augustine.
St. Bernard de Clairvaux Church (Spanish: Monasterio Español de Sacramenia) is a medieval Spanish monastery cloister which was built in the town of Sacramenia in Segovia, Spain, in the 12th century but dismantled in the 20th century and shipped to New York City in the United States.
Mizner Park. Dedicated to Addison Mizner, the architect whose Mediterranean Revival and Spanish Colonial Revival style impacted South Florida's look, Mizner Park is a mixed-use development with ...
Second Spanish period and into statehood 1790–1882, Family of Gerónimo Álvarez & Antonia Vens 1882–1918, William B. Duke family (1882–1884), Mary Carver and Dr. Charles P. Carver (1884–1898), James W. Henderson family (1898–1911), George T. Reddington and the South Beach Alligator Farm 1911–1918
Spanish Florida (Spanish: La Florida) was the first major European land-claim and attempted settlement-area in northern America during the European Age of Discovery. La Florida formed part of the Captaincy General of Cuba in the Viceroyalty of New Spain, and the Spanish Empire during Spanish colonization of the Americas.