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The educational purpose was needed in order to allow the planned 60,000-square-foot (5,600 m 2) museum to be built on land that was zoned for residential use. [7] [8] The Planning Board rejected the foundation's application in August 2015 [9] but a settlement was eventually reached in July 2017 and construction of the museum was completed in ...
A city house for Evans's father-in-law. [3]: 239, cat. 272 Edward S. Beale house (1882–83), 240 South 13th Street, Philadelphia. A city house for Evans's sister-in-law and husband. [3]: 239, cat. 273 Allen Evans house and row (1883), 237-41 South 21st Street and 2049 Locust Street, Philadelphia. [3]: 242, cat. 280 Evans's own city house (#237 ...
The house is a fine example of the residences that master architect E. Stewart Williams designed between 1947 and the end of the 1960s. [3] The single-story structure features an open floor plan, a low-slung roof, deep overhangs, and large glass surface areas with sliding glass doors that facilitate its indoor-outdoor flow.
Historic house museums are sometimes known as a "memory museum", which is a term used to suggest that the museum contains a collection of the traces of memory of the people who once lived there. It is often made up of the inhabitants' belongings and objects – this approach is mostly concerned with authenticity. Some museums are organised ...
The Dr. Willis Meriwether House, also known as the Clark-Malone House, is a historic vernacular Greek Revival style house in Eutaw, Alabama, United States. The house is a two-story wood-framed building on a brick foundation, six square box columns span the front portico. It was built in 1856 by Dr. Willis Meriwether.
Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes married William "Billy" Evans secretly in 2019. The couple had their son, William, in 2021 and daughter, Invicta, in 2023.
It was the home of William Gray Evans beginning 1889. In 1900, Margaret Gray Evans and her daughter Anne Evans moved into the house. The Byers–Evans house was built in 1883 by William Byers, the founder of the Rocky Mountain News and was sold to William Gray Evans in 1889. [4]
The settlement features three main parts: (1) nearly $2.8 billion in backpay to former athletes (mostly who played in 2016-2021) distributed over a 10-year period through reductions in NCAA and ...