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Following the purchase of the Darling House property, Dr Moran stated his intention to restore the original Georgian house and subsequent additions to an aged care residence or seniors' living facility, albeit a more upmarket one then previously, "ensuring that the original Georgian features are restored". [29]
Gloster House is a Georgian-Palladian country house operating as a hotel and wedding venue near Brosna, County Offaly, Ireland.The design of the house has sometimes been attributed to the architect Edward Lovett Pearce who was a cousin of the owner, Trevor Lloyd, at the time the main house was constructed around 1720 – although no firm evidence of this survives.
Sanitarium Sign. The Lillian G. Carter Nursing Center, formerly known as the Wise Sanitarium [1] in Plains, Georgia, United States, was a hospital.Currently, it is a nursing care facility, but was the birthplace of former United States President James Earl Carter Jr., who was born there on October 1, 1924, when his mother was working there as a registered nurse. [2]
The home of Don Wenzel & Ron Darnell in eastern Jefferson County. This Federal Georgian house was built in 1845 and sits on a 14-acre property with the original Edward Tyler stone house, circa ...
CANTON − A longtime Catholic-run care institution is for sale. The House of Loreto, ... In 2022, a Nursing Home Family Satisfaction Survey named House of Loreto the No. 2 facility in Ohio. It ...
The Georgia B. Williams Nursing Home in Camilla, Georgia was the only facility where African-American women could deliver babies in Mitchell County, for many years prior to the Civil Rights Movement. It was owned by Beatrice ("Miss Bea") Borders (1892–1971), a midwife who delivered over 6,000 babies at the home between 1941 and 1971.
Georgian House may refer to: Georgian House, Bristol; The Georgian House, Edinburgh; The Georgian House, British children's television series; See also.
The Wick is a Grade I listed Georgian house [1] in Richmond, Greater London, located at the corner of Nightingale Lane and Richmond Hill.The house, designed in 1775 by architect Robert Mylne for Lady St. Aubyn, was for many years the family home of actor Sir John Mills, [2] who sold it to Ronnie Wood of the rock band Faces (and later of the Rolling Stones) in 1971.