Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The William A. Clark House, nicknamed "Clark's Folly", [2] was a mansion located at 962 Fifth Avenue on the northeast corner of its intersection with East 77th Street on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, New York City.
960 Fifth Avenue was built on the former site of the William A. Clark House. When Senator Clark died in 1925, his widow and daughter, Huguette Clark, moved to 907 Fifth Avenue and sold the mansion, which cost $7 million, [2] to Anthony Campagna for $3 million (equivalent to $52,121,000 in 2023) in 1927. [3] Campagana had the mansion torn down ...
Clark later built a much larger and more extravagant 121-room mansion on Fifth Avenue in New York City, the William A. Clark House. He died on March 2, 1925, and is interred in Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx , New York City.
The Clark family bought the property and its Italianate mansion in 1923. Senator William Clark died in 1925. After the 1925 Santa Barbara earthquake damaged the home, his widow, Anna Clark, Huguette's mother, had a new 22,000-square-foot mansion built in a French style, designed by Reginald Davis Johnson, completed in 1933.
The Copper King Mansion, [2] also known as the W. A. Clark Mansion, is a 34-room residence of Romanesque Revival Victorian architecture that was built from 1884 to 1888 as the Butte, Montana, residence of William Andrews Clark, one of Montana's three famous Copper Kings. The home features fresco painted ceilings, elegant parquets of rare ...
William A. Clark House: 1911: Beaux-Arts Châteauesque: Austin W. Lord, J. Monroe Hewlett, Washington Hull: New York City: Demolished in 1927. [93] more images: Henry Clay Frick House: 1914: Beaux-Arts: Carrère and Hastings: New York City: Today, home to the Frick Collection [94] A.C James Mansion: 1914 Beaux-Arts: Allen & Collens: New York City
The 5,200-square-foot historic Clark Mansion home in Fairhaven is on the market for the first time in more than 50 years.
The William Clark House, also known as the North Ward Center, is located in Newark, Essex County, New Jersey, United States. The house was built in 1879 at a cost of $200,000 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on November 10, 1977. [1] The house is a 28-room Queen Anne style designed by William Halsey Wood. [1]