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The Hale-Whitney Mansion, is located in Bayonne, Hudson County, New Jersey, United States. The building was built in 1869 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on June 7, 1996. The building was considered to be exemplary of the Second Empire style of architecture, one of the few remaining unaltered structures in Bayonne. [3]
PNC Bank Building (Toledo, Ohio) Polish National Home (Hartford, Connecticut) Porter Pool Bathhouse; Palazzo delle Poste, Catania; Pozières Memorial; President's House (University of New Mexico) The Punch Bowl, York
Buildings and structures completed in 1930 (18 C, 158 P) Buildings and structures completed in 1931 (23 C, 89 P) Buildings and structures completed in 1932 (19 C, 113 P)
The building is now known as the Bayonne Community Museum. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] planned to open after the completion of the renovation of the facility and installation of its first exhibition. The non-profit organization [ 5 ] is creating a collection which contains variety of artifacts and other donated objects.
A different three-story style apartment house is also common in urban working-class neighborhoods in northern New Jersey (particularly in and around Newark, Jersey City and Paterson). They are sometimes locally referred to as "Bayonne Boxes". Similar brick apartment buildings were built in Chicago in the 1910s and 1920s. There they are locally ...
This is a list of historic country estates in Lake County, Ohio built between the years 1895 and 1930. Around 1885 the city of Cleveland, Ohio was home to an estimated 70 millionaires. Around 1885 the city of Cleveland, Ohio was home to an estimated 70 millionaires.
Built by Jonathan Singletary Dunham, who built the first gristmill in New Jersey and was a member of the New Jersey Assembly [38] Date of 1709 ascertained through tree-ring dating. Rockingham: Rocky Hill Kingston: c. 1710: Museum
James J. Van Buskirk (1791–1856), of the sixth generation of early Dutch settlers in Bayonne, laid out a cemetery in 1849 during a cholera epidemic which had struck the area. [3] In 1854 Van Buskirk wrote a will and mentioned 2 acres (8,100 m 2 ) of his land situated at Constable Hook off East 22 Street was to be reserved for the cemetery.