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Before the spot became a ranch for sale, it was an entire community. The realtor said a hotel was built in the area for the stagecoach line, and the original barn was turned into a stagecoach U.S ...
These streets are now surrounded by suburban development on the formerly agricultural fields, but retain a distinctively 18th and 19th-century spacing and layout. The oldest house in the district is the first to be built by John Kentfield, one of the area's first permanent residents, about 1780; a second house of his, built just a few years ...
18th; 19th; 20th; 21st; 22nd; 23rd Subcategories. This category has the following 100 subcategories, out of 100 total. ... Pages in category "Houses completed in the ...
Denham Place is a Grade I listed 17th-century country house in Denham, Buckinghamshire, surrounded by a Grade II listed 18th-century landscape park. [1] The estate borders the Buckinghamshire Golf Club. [2]
From the 18th century, landowners and their servants would move to a townhouse during the social season when balls and other society gatherings took place. [1] From the 18th century, most townhouses were terraced; it was one of the successes of Georgian architecture to persuade the rich to buy terraced houses, especially if they were in a ...
Doughoregan Slave Quarters Carriage House circa 1940. Doughoregan Manor is a colonial manor house built in the early 18th century. [3] The slave plantation was founded on 7,000 acres patented to Charles Carroll I as "Doughoreagan" (sometimes spelled Doororegan) named for a family estate in Ireland, in 1702, and expanded to 10,000 acres as "Doughoreagan Manor" in 1717.
William Pike House, 19th Century; Witch House – c. 1642 – home of Witch Trials Judge Jonathan Corwin; William Murray House built in 1688; Yin Yu Tang House, was built around 1800 in China. [8] 200 years after construction the Yin Yu Tang House was disassembled in China, shipped to America and then reassembled inside the Peabody Essex Museum.
William Green's 1669 patent for 1,150 acres (4.7 km 2) encompassed most of the peninsula between Dogue Creek and Accotink Creek, along the Potomac River.Although this property was sub-divided and sold in the early 18th century, it was reassembled during the 1730s to create the central portion of Col. William Fairfax's 2,200-acre (8.9 km 2) plantation of Belvoir Manor.