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Waverly Mansion is a historic home located at Marriottsville in Howard County, Maryland, USA. It was built circa 1756, and is a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2 -story Federal style stone house, covered with stucco, with a hyphen and addition that date to circa 1811.
Waverly is a historic home located at Croom in Prince George's County, Maryland. The house, constructed in 1855, is a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story, two-part Italianate-style frame house. The casing of the principal entrance is a combination of both the Greek Revival and Italianate styles. Also on the property are two of the original outbuildings, a ...
HO-21, Waverley, 2335 Waverly Mansion Drive, Marriotsville; HO-22, Doughoregan Manor (Charles Carroll III of Carrollton House), 3500 Old Manor Lane, Ellicott City; HO-23, Burleigh Manor and Gate House (Burleigh Cottage), 3950 White Rose Way, Ellicott City; HO-24, Font Hill, 3838 Parrot Drive, Ellicott City
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 ...
George Howard (1789-1846) the twenty-second Governor of Maryland and son of John Eager Howard, also lived at "Waverly" after receiving it from his father in 1811.; John Eager Howard (1752-1827) a Colonel in the Revolutionary War, U.S. Senator, namesake of Howard County and the fifth Governor of Maryland, owned the plantation "Waverly" which still stands in present-day Marriottsville.
Waverly is a neighborhood in the north central area of Baltimore, Maryland, located to the north of the adjacent same neighborhood called Better Waverly and west of Ednor Gardens-Lakeside, north and east of Charles Village (formerly named Peabody Heights when laid out in the 1870s) west of the area of Coldstream-Homestead-Montebello neighborhoods, along with the campus of the former red brick ...
Waverley is a historic home located near Morgantown, Charles County, Maryland. It is a large two story, five-bay, Flemish bond brick house, that faces the Potomac River. All interior woodwork is characteristic of the Federal period. [2] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975. [1]
Rosecliff in Newport, Rhode Island, was built for a silver heiress during the Gilded Age. It measures 28,800 square feet and features 30 rooms, including Newport's largest ballroom.