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The Newton White Mansion is a Neo-Georgian home was built in 1939 by architect William Lawrence Bottomley for Captain Newton H. White of the United States Navy.Captain White had a long and distinguished career, serving on the USS Yorktown, the USS Lexington, and, prior to World War II, as the first commanding officer of the USS Enterprise.
Marenka House; Marietta (Glenn Dale, Maryland) Market Master's House (Bladensburg, Maryland) Mattaponi (John Bowie Jr. House) Melford (Mitchellville, Maryland) Melwood Park; Montpelier Mansion (Laurel, Maryland) Mount Hope (Cheverly, Maryland) Mount Lubentia; Mount Pleasant (Upper Marlboro, Maryland) Mount Rainier Historic District; Moyaone Reserve
After Newton White died in 1891, his widow Courtney White continued to live in the house until it was inherited by their nephew, George S. White. [2] By 1925, it was sold to the Whitt family, who sold it to the Walter Christopher family in 1943. [2] The house has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since October 22, 1987. [3]
A Maryland mansion built in 1764 took a trip on the water Wednesday (September 25). The brick home was being relocated from Easton to Queenstown - a distance of less than 20 miles by land, but the ...
Pickleball gives him an adrenaline rush, a feeling of strength, agility, virility. The games are short and the rallies rapid. It’s also a social game: You can play people at various skill levels ...
Newton Harris White (1860–1931) was an American farmer and politician. He was elected as a Democratic member of the Tennessee House of Representatives in 1899. [1] He served as the Speaker of the Tennessee Senate from 1901 to 1903, and from 1913 to 1915. [1] He is the father of Captain Newton Harris White, Jr., a 1907 graduate of the U.S ...
The largest pickleball facility in the Northeast region is set to open in New Jersey. Opening this fall, The Robbinsville Pickle House announced it will boast more than 20 pickleball courts in the ...
According to Maine State Historian Earle Shettleworth, Jr., who knew Davis, the model was a manor house that Davis had seen on a bicycle tour of England, likely the charming Stuart-style brick manor at Chipping Camden, whose design and composition were closely followed in the Davis house with a few differences–notably the balconet over the ...