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Gothic Revival architecture in New York (state) (4 C, 170 P) Gothic Revival architecture in North Carolina (2 C, 91 P) Carpenter Gothic architecture in North Dakota (1 C, 1 P)
Gothic Revival architecture in Washington, D.C. (2 C, 19 P) Pages in category "Gothic Revival architecture in the United States" This category contains only the following page.
The Gothic Revival building was designed by Alexander Jackson Davis and Ithiel Town. The Atheneum is the oldest public art museum in the nation. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. [2] Ward's Castle, Port Chester, New York, built in the 1870s. The house is an early example of the use of reinforced concrete.
Carpenter Gothic houses and small churches became common in North America in the late nineteenth century. [2] Additionally during this time, Protestant followers were building many Carpenter Gothic churches throughout the midwest, northeast, and some areas in the south of the US. [3] This style is a part of the Gothic Revival movement. [4]
The building contains many busts and statues to American political, social, and intellectual leaders inside the main reading room and great hall as well as on the western façade of the building. Although Gothic Revival architecture was most popular in the 1800s, the most famous Gothic Revival structure in the city—the Washington National ...
Gothic Revival church buildings in New York (state) (2 C, 160 P) Gothic Revival church buildings in North Carolina (1 C, 79 P) Gothic Revival church buildings in North Dakota (1 C, 22 P)
The main block of the house, built in 1840, is the first known commission of the British-born architect Joseph C. Wells, whose best-known commissions are the later First Presbyterian Church in Manhattan, and the Roseland Cottage in Woodstock, Connecticut (the latter is also a National Historic Landmark Gothic Revival summer house). It is one of ...
It was built in 1832 [2] and expanded and remodeled in the Gothic Revival style in 1858 by William Cincinnatus Ashe, a physician from North Carolina. The cottage is a 1 + 1 ⁄ 2 -story wood-frame building, the front elevation features two semi-octagonal gabled front bays with a one-story porch inset between them.