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It was built about 1810 by Warren Hull, one of Erie County's earliest pioneers. It is in the Federal style and includes the family burial plot in the rear of the property. [2] It is the oldest stone house in western New York and is currently owned by the Hull Family home association. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in ...
Oldest surviving structure in New York, oldest in Brooklyn, oldest on Long Island. Zachariah Hawkins House: Stony Brook: 1660 c. Klinkenberg(h) Bouwerji Coxsackie: 1663 c. One of oldest surviving Dutch homes north of greater New York City area. On the western shore of Hudson River.
New York City: Built for Augustus C Richards, was demolished in 1931 for the construction of Fort Tryon Park. Alexander Turney Stewart House 1869 Second Empire: John Kellum: New York City: Demolished in 1901 more images: Charles M. Schwab House: 1906: Beaux-Arts: Maurice Hébert: New York City: Demolished in 1947 [89] Tryon Hall 1903 Beaux-Arts ...
When, in the late 1970s, a young Los Angeles filmmaker named Jane Spiller commissioned Frank Gehry to design her home in Venice, California, it was an early but groundbreaking period of Gehry’s ...
Ada Louise Huxtable described the buildings in 1968 as "one of the best buildings New York could and can claim, then or now". [190] The New York Times reported in 1971, "The complex has long been regarded as one of New York City's architectural treasures." [171] The houses remained relatively nondescript through the late 20th century. [259]
Carson McCullers House is a historic home located at South Nyack in Rockland County, New York. It is a two-story Second Empire –style residence constructed in 1880 and modified with subsequent interior and exterior modifications largely in the Colonial Revival spirit about 1910.
The Clayton-Cedarmere Estates are located in Roslyn Harbor, New York, United States, listed jointly on the National Register of Historic Places & New York State Register of Historic Places in 1986. Clayton – the bulk of the property – is the large landscaped Bryce/Frick estate , now home to the Nassau County Museum of Art .
Wilson House is one of the oldest houses in Oyster Bay, New York, still standing on its original site. The house dates back to the 1750s, and is an example of saltbox architecture. This refers to houses, often south-facing, with sloping rear sections ending at a height of three or four feet. Two legends persist about famous visitors to the house.