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Weetwood, a residence at 427 Tor Street, Toowoomba, is a ornate brick house built in 1888 for Richard William Scholefield. [1]The allotments on which this residence is situated were originally a part of the land purchased in 1862 as Portion 176, parish Drayton, County of Aubigny (160 acres), by James Taylor, politician and Mayor of Toowoomba in 1890; Thomas George Robinson, stock and land ...
Geeumbi is a heritage-listed villa at 1 South Street, Rangeville, Toowoomba, Toowoomba Region, Queensland, Australia. It was designed by Thomas Arthur Price for his own residence and built from 1914 to 1918 by Ernest Pottinger.
Site map, 2019. Harris House is a substantial, single storey villa residence in a Federation-era style. It occupies a prominent 0.19 hectares (0.47 acres) site on the corner of Margaret and Clifford streets, located within a mixed residential and commercial area on the western side of the Toowoomba central business district.
Ascot House is a heritage-listed villa at 15 Newmarket Street, Newtown, Toowoomba, Toowoomba Region, Queensland, Australia. It was built from 1870s to 1890s. It was built from 1870s to 1890s. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 21 October 1992.
Cotswold Hill is located 8.1 kilometres (5 mi) by road north-west of the city centre off Warrego Highway.It is a rural-residential area with homes on small acreages. [3]It is bounded to the north by Holmes Road, to the east by Boundary Street, to the south by Bridge Street and the Toowoomba Connection Road, and to the west (partly) by Gowrie Junction Road.by Holmes Road
Harlaxton in Toowoomba, Queensland, ca. 1870. Harlaxton House is a low-set, single-storey stone residence built on a hill side with views overlooking the Toowoomba Range.It is a good example of the Victorian Georgian style of architecture popular from the 1840s to the 1890s.
Glen Alpine is a two-storey timber residence which is believed to have been built c. 1918 for Albert Rowbotham, of the Toowoomba firm Rowbotham and Co., bootmakers. The house was possibly designed by prominent Toowoomba architect, Harry J. Marks. [1] The land was granted to Thomas Perkins in 1875, then acquired by William Shaw in 1876.
Smithfield House was designed under James Marks & Son whose works also include the Bandstand in Toowoomba Botanical Gardens, Ascot House in Toowoomba and Vacy Hall c. 1900. James and Harry Marks have left a significant visible legacy in the buildings of Toowoomba of which Smithfield House is an important example. [1]
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