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Hammond Castle is located on the Atlantic coast in the Magnolia area of Gloucester, Massachusetts. The castle, which was constructed between 1926 and 1929, was the home, laboratory, and museum of John Hays Hammond Jr., an inventor and pioneer in the study of remote control who held over four hundred patents. The building is composed of modern ...
It is a stone castle-like house with a crenellated roof-line. [62] Singer Castle, formerly Jorstadt Castle, Thousand Islands, New York, built in 1896. Designed by Ernest Flagg for Frederick Gilbert Bourne of the Singer Manufacturing Company. [63] Sky High Castle, Redings Mill, Missouri, built 1927–30. Situated upon a 180-foot-tall (55 m) hill ...
Today, houses the Cooper-Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum [84] more images: Joseph Raphael De Lamar House: 1902: Beaux-Arts: C. P. H. Gilbert: New York City: Purchased by the Republic of Poland in 1973 to house its Consulate General [85] more images: James A. Burden House: 1905: Italian Renaissance: Warren & Wetmore: New York City
The Randal House is a historic mansion in Hammond, Louisiana, U.S.. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since February 19, 2008. [2]
Hammond–Harwood House Main Facade The Villa Pisani, Montagnana from The Four Books of Architecture by Andrea Palladio, Giacomo Leoni, 1742. The house ranks architecturally with many of the great mansions built in the late Colonial period; however, it is among only a few houses in British North America directly inspired from a plate in Palladio's, I Quattro Libri dell'Architettura.
The E. C. Hammond House is a historic house at 35 Groveland Street in Newton, Massachusetts. The 1 3/4 story wood-frame house was built in 1909 and designed by its owner, Edward C. Hammond, a lumberman. The house is a simple but well-crafted and preserved example of Craftsman styling.
Moses Hammond House, also known as the Ragan House, is a historic home in Archdale, Randolph County, North Carolina. It was built about 1880 and is a two-story, cruciform=plan, Italianate-style frame dwelling. It has a cross-gable roof with a front projecting bay with flanking decorative one-story frame porches.
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 .