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The Newton White Mansion is a Neo-Georgian home was built in 1939 by architect William Lawrence Bottomley for Captain Newton H. White of the United States Navy.Captain White had a long and distinguished career, serving on the USS Yorktown, the USS Lexington, and, prior to World War II, as the first commanding officer of the USS Enterprise.
St. Francis Xavier Church and Newtown Manor House Historic District, St. Mary's County, including undated photo, at Maryland Historical Trust; Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS) No. MD-322, "St. Francis Xavier Church, State Route 243 vicinity, Compton vicinity, St. Mary's County, MD", 14 photos, 7 measured drawings, 1 photo caption page
more images: Townsend House: 1901: Beaux-Arts: Carrère and Hastings: Washington, DC: Home to the Cosmos Club since 1952 [19] more images: Walsh-McLean House: 1903: Washington, DC: Today the Embassy of Indonesia [20] more images: Anderson House: 1905: Beaux-Arts: Little & Browne: Washington, DC: Built for Lartz Anderson. Today, it houses the ...
Original building was damaged in a fire in 2000, and subsequently razed in 2001 [7] 2: Bethany Presbyterian Church Complex: November 13, 1989 (#89001968) March 27, 2020: Elkton Rd. Bryson: 3: Noblit-Lytle House
According to Maine State Historian Earle Shettleworth, Jr., who knew Davis, the model was a manor house that Davis had seen on a bicycle tour of England, likely the charming Stuart-style brick manor at Chipping Camden, whose design and composition were closely followed in the Davis house with a few differences–notably the balconet over the ...
Whitehall, Annapolis, Maryland, USA. North side of the house looking southeast. The American Revolution prevented Sharpe's return and so he instructed his friend and former secretary John Ridout to sell Whitehall. Benjamin Ogle purchased the house from Ridout and two days later resold the house to Ridout for the same sum. Whitehall remained in ...
The Hampton Mansion and remaining 43 acres (17 ha) of the Ridgely estate were designated a National Historic Site by the Secretary of the Interior on June 22, 1948—the first site to be so selected on the basis of its historical significance and "outstanding merit as an architectural monument".
The architects then went back to Maryland and Annapolis historical roots to restore the official residence of the Governor to completely alter and go to a different Georgian / Colonial Revival and Federal of compatible styles of architecture to match the general style of the nearby historic red brick and unique / distinctive white wooden dome ...