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The complex was built around 1833 by Colonel Joseph Tuley, Jr. (1796–1860), a large slaveholder, [4] who made the name a pun on his name and the Tuileries Palace. The house is a late Federal style mansion with a domed entrance hall. The house was sold by the Tuley family to Colonel Upton Lawrence Boyce (1830–1907) in 1866.
Upload another image 14 Burnside Road, The Ingle, Including Gateway, Quadrants, Piers, Gates, Railings, Coach House/Stable Block And Summer House 55°48′44″N 4°12′01″W / 55.812119°N 4.200218°W / 55.812119; -4.200218 (14 Burnside Road, The Ingle, Including Gateway, Quadrants, Piers, Gates, Railings, Coach House/Stable Block And Summer House) Category B 33704 Upload ...
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The Tuileries is an 1831 novel by the British writer Catherine Gore. [1] A bestselling writer of silver fork novels , Gore turned in this to the recent history of Paris following the French Revolution and particularly the Tuileries Palace .
Rutherglen's other Category A listed buildings are located very near to the town hall: a medieval clock tower and churchyard is situated immediately to the west, while St Columbkille's RC Church (completed in 1940) is directly opposite on the other side of Main Street. There are also several Category B structures in close proximity (library ...
Rutherglen (/ ˈ r ʌ ð ər ɡ l ɪ n /; Scots: Ruglen, Scottish Gaelic: An Ruadh-Ghleann) is a town in South Lanarkshire, Scotland, immediately south-east of the city of Glasgow, three miles (five kilometres) from its centre and directly south of the River Clyde.
Rutherglen Castle was located where Castle Street meets King Street in Rutherglen, Scotland. [1] It was a large and important castle, having been built in the 13th century; the walls were reportedly 5 feet thick.
The Tuileries Palace (French: Palais des Tuileries, IPA: [palɛ de tɥilʁi]) was a royal and imperial palace in Paris which stood on the right bank of the Seine, directly in the west-front of the Louvre Palace. It was the Parisian residence of most French monarchs, from Henry IV to Napoleon III, until it was burned by the Paris Commune in 1871.