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Raphael Research Resource from the National Gallery, London; V&A London online feature on the Raphael Cartoons; Ten drawings and three paintings from the Royal Collection; Web Gallery of Art; Birthplace Museum of Raphael, Urbino, on the Artist's Studio Museum Network website; Raphael Santi at ColourLex. Raphael at the National Gallery of Art
George Washington Birthplace National Monument; Daniel Webster Birthplace State Historic Site; Noah Webster House; Gideon Welles House; Benjamin West Birthplace; George Westinghouse Jr. Birthplace and Boyhood Home; Gough Whitlam's birthplace; Walt Whitman Birthplace State Historic Site; Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library; Levi Woodbury Homestead
The Raphael Semmes House, (also known as the Horta–Semmes House), is a historic residence at 804 Government Street in Mobile, Alabama. It is best known as the 1871-1877 home of Raphael Semmes , captain of the Confederate States Navy sloop-of-war CSS Alabama , a commerce raider during the American Civil War .
The Rafael Guastavino Sr. Estate, also known as Rhododendron, is a historic estate and a national historic district located near Black Mountain, Buncombe County, North Carolina. The district encompasses three contributing sites and three contributing structures associated with the former estate of the noted Spanish-born architectural engineer ...
The Jacob Raphael Building is a historic building located north of downtown Davenport, Iowa, United States. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983. [1] The two-story structure, consisting of a three-bay wide, gable-roofed structure and a five-bay wide “wing”, was completed in 1875. It contains commercial space on ...
Carson's birthplace and childhood home. Her 1962 book Silent Spring initiated the modern environmentalist movement. [69] Pearl S. Buck (2) Pearl S. Buck House National Historic Landmark: 1933–late 1960s Bucks County
The Birthplace of Ronald Reagan, also known as the Graham Building, is located in an apartment on the second floor of a late 19th-century commercial building in Tampico, Illinois, United States. The building was built in 1896, and housed a tavern from that time until 1915.
It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2007. [1] Susan B. Anthony lived there from age 13 to age 19, from 1833 to 1839. The family moved to there from Adams, Massachusetts, where she was born. The listing includes the house, a retaining wall, and a carriage barn. Italianate features were added to the house in 1885. [2]