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Floor plan of a basic central-passage house. The central-passage house , also known variously as central hall plan house , center-hall house , hall-passage-parlor house , Williamsburg cottage , and Tidewater-type cottage , was a vernacular , or folk form, house type from the colonial period onward into the 19th century in the United States .
McElligot's Pool is a children's book written and illustrated by Theodor Geisel under the pen name Dr. Seuss and published by Random House in 1947. In the story, a boy named Marco, who first appeared in Geisel's 1937 book And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street, imagines a wide variety of fantastic fish that could be swimming in the pond in which he is fishing.
The 60 acre property, annexed into North Myrtle Beach, was last purchased for about $4.7 million in July 2023 and has a market value of more than four million dollars, according to Horry County ...
She also expanded the Dr. Seuss short story "Gustav the Goldfish," originally published in Redbook, into the book A Fish Out of Water (1961), which was illustrated by P. D. Eastman. [12] In 2012, A Fish Out of Water was included in the Beginner Books anthology The Big Purple Book of Beginner Books .
A twin-tracked monorail themed around Dr. Seuss' 1961 story The Sneetches that tours Seuss Landing and references other Dr. Seuss books. 40 in (101 cm) One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish 1999 Zierer: A spinning ride, based on the Dr. Seuss book of the same name, that lets riders control their own fish in tandem to the ride audio.
"Tidewater" is a term for the north Atlantic Plain region of the United States. It is located east of the Atlantic Seaboard Fall Line and north of the Deep South . It encompasses the Chesapeake Bay and includes Delaware , the remainder of the Delmarva Peninsula , Southern Maryland and the Eastern Shore of Maryland , Washington, D.C. , Eastern ...
Tidewater architecture is a style of architecture found mostly in coastal areas of the Southern United States. These homes, with large wraparound porches (or galleries) and hip roofs , were designed for wet, hot climates.
Resort architecture [1] (German: Bäderarchitektur) is an architectural style that is especially characteristic of spas and seaside resorts on the German Baltic coast. The style evolved since the foundation of Heiligendamm in 1793, and flourished especially around the year 1870, when resorts were connected to big cities via railway lines.