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The Sage-Kirby House is located in a rural-suburban setting of central Cromwell, at the southwest corner of Shunpike Road (Connecticut Route 3) and Evergreen Road. It is a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story brick structure, five bays wide, with a side-gable roof and a large central chimney. Its main entry, centered on the front, has no significant decoration ...
Edward Ferry continued as one of Grand Haven's most prominent businessmen through the 1870s and into the 1880s. In the mid-1880s, as the lumber business sagged, Ferry moved from this house to Wisconsin, and later to Park City, Utah to take up silver mining. Ferry sold the house in Grand Haven in 1885. [2]
The Grand Haven Historic District extends along six blocks of Washington Street, the city's primary business district. The district extends along adjacent streets to include the city hall, former police and fire department building, church buildings, and multiple substantial buildings constructed as residences, although many of these have been ...
Nathaniel and Esther Robbins purchased the site this house is located on in 1891. At the time a brick house known as the Vanderhoef house was located on the site. in 1899 they demolished the Vanderhoef house and hired Baldus Pellegrom, a Grand Haven carpenter and ship's carpenter, to construct the current house. Construction was complete in ...
Kirby House (Live Oak, Florida), Historic architecture in Suwannee County, Florida Kirby House (Trinity, Louisiana) , listed on the NRHP in Louisiana William R. Kirby Sr. House , Hillsdale, Michigan, NRHP-listed
Kempf House Museum; Bernard Ginsburg House; Biddle House (Mackinac Island) Big Traverse Bay Historic District; Chief Andrew J. Blackbird House; David and Elizabeth Bell Boldman House; Edward D. Born House; Bowers Harbor Inn; Benjamin and Mary Ann Bradford House; Brinkerhoff–Becker House; Brooks Farm; Eric and Margaret Ann (Davis) Brown House ...
Richard and Nancy Turner bought the house in 1956 and paid for moving the house from Henrietta to a nearby location in Pittsford. [2] The house is located on an estate of 6 acres (2.428 hectares) with a garden, designed and developed in the 1960s by the famous landscape architect Fletcher Steele. The garden was Steele's last major landscaping ...
Notable buildings include the Thomas Kirby House (1839), William F. Spencer House (1909), John Fitzgibbons House (1918), Theopharia A. Hough House (1909), Pearl Hopkins House (1893), and Edward R. Templar House (1905). [2] This are said to be oldest homes in the district. [3] It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1999. [1 ...