Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Clinton House is a historic house museum at 930 West Clinton Drive in Fayetteville, Arkansas. Built in 1931, it was the first home of Bill Clinton and Hillary Rodham while they both taught at the University of Arkansas School of Law and was where they married in 1975. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2010.
The President William Jefferson Clinton Birthplace Home National Historic Site is located in Hope, Arkansas. [2] Built in 1917 by H. S. Garrett, in this house the 42nd president of the United States, Bill Clinton, spent the first four years of his life, having been born on August 19, 1946, at Julia Chester Hospital in Hope, Arkansas.
On July 20, 2024 the John A. Rowland House, now referred to as the John Rowland Mansion, re-opened to the public. [3] In partnership with the alternative preservation agency House Museum, the historic site debuted 11 new site-specific artworks by David Horvitz, Emily Barker, and Evan Curtis Charles Hall, to compliment the property's permanent Rowland family exhibition.
The oldest buildings in the district are the two mills on opposite sides of the Clinton Dam on the South Branch Raritan River. The Red Mill, on the west, was built c. 1810 and Dunham's Mill, on the east, was built in 1837. [3] The Clinton House is likely located at the site of an earlier 18th-century tavern. [3] [4] The district has three churches.
Rowland was born December 1, 1878, in Clinton, Michigan, to Clinton Charles and Melissa Ruth Rowland. [3] In 1901, he landed a job as an office boy for the Detroit firm of Rogers and MacFarlane, quickly moving on to the prestigious George D. Mason firm. [4] In 1909, he joined the office of Albert Kahn Associates, who had also apprenticed under ...
Rowland House, also known as the Shovel Shop, is a historic home located at Cheltenham Township, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania. It was built about 1774, expanded about 1810–1820, with additions built in the early 1900s and 1920s / 1930s. It is a 3 + 1 ⁄ 2-story, stuccoed stone building with a steep gable roof and one-story, frame addition ...
Between 1770 and 1908, the house was the residence of five generations of the Johnson family. The second and third generations were active in the Underground Railroad during the 1850s. Jennett Rowland Johnson, her children Rowland, Israel, Ellwood, Sarah, and Elizabeth Johnson, and their spouses were members of abolitionist groups such as the ...
Josiah Rowland Howell [4] Charles Franklin Humphrey [47] LeRoy P. Hunt [12] No Henry Edwards Huntington [48] No Rothwell Hyde [4] Bobby Ray Inman [49] Yes Henry Irving: Honorary [36] No Joseph Irwin: Founding [4] Wallace Irwin [4] No William Henry Irwin [12] No Paul R. Isenberg [12] George I. Ives: Life [4] Livingstone Jenks [4] Rufus P ...