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William P. Hall House is a historic home located at Lancaster, Schuyler County, Missouri, United States. It was built about 1902, and is a large two-story, irregular plan, Late Victorian style frame dwelling. It features a one-story wraparound porch with Ionic order columns and a porte cochere.
St. Charles Historic District: September 22, 1970 June 4, 1987 May 1, 1991 October 10, 1996 87000903 91000504 96001087: Roughly, Main St. from Adams St. on the north to Boone's Lick Rd. on the south, east to the Missouri river, west to 2nd St.
John B. Busch Brewery Historic District is a historic brewery complex and national historic district located at Washington, Franklin County, Missouri.The complex developed between about 1855 and 1917.
The Church of Scientology owned the building between 1974 and 1985. In 1988, Saint Louis University acquired the mansion and converted it to become an annex to its law school, previously housed in the adjacent Morrissey Hall. However, in the mid-2010s, the law school was relocated to downtown St. Louis to Scott Hall.
The district encompasses 28 contributing buildings and 1 contributing site in a predominantly residential section of St. Joseph. It developed between about 1888 and 1938, and includes representative examples of Italianate , Queen Anne , Colonial Revival , Tudor Revival , and American Craftsman style architecture.
Between 1894 and 1911, Janssen designed more than a dozen St. Louis houses, as well as the Grand Boulevard entrance pillars to the Compton Heights subdivision in the City of St. Louis, and the 12,000 square-foot “Magic Chef Mansion,” built in 1908 for American Stove Company co-founder Charles Stockstrom.
The property contains the main house, a shed, a barn, and a brick outhouse. [2] The main house was built in an early Italianate architecture style and has two stories. [2] It was an example of the transition from traditional architecture of mid-19th century building, to the newer Italianate style that emerging in the area and as of 1988, it had maintained many of its original architectural ...
Originally, the home was the residence of wealthy St. Louis entrepreneur Samuel Cupples. In 1946, the house was bought by Saint Louis University for $50,000 USD and converted to serve as a student center (complete with a bowling alley and bar in the basement) and an office for academic advising. [3] [4]