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Kirkwood House was a 19th-century building in Washington, D.C., located at the northeast corner of the intersection of 12th Street W and Pennsylvania Avenue. Opened in 1848, it was initially called Fuller House, and then the Irving Hotel, before becoming known as the Kirkwood House in 1854.
The hotel was sold, along with the Wardman Park Hotel, to Sheraton Hotels on May 27, 1953. [2] The new owners renamed the hotel the Sheraton-Carlton Hotel. In December 1987, The Sheraton-Carlton closed for extensive renovations, costing $16 million. [5] The hotel's guest rooms were entirely gutted and enlarged, reducing their number from 250 to ...
Additional changes were made c.1868-70. Despite a historical plaque on the 17th Street facade, there is no historical evidence for the local legend that Washington Irving lived in this house, although his nephew, Edgar Irving, did live next door at 120 East 17th Street, and had a son named Washington Irving after the writer.
Bedford Springs Hotel: Bedford, Pennsylvania: 1862–1864 Abraham Lincoln: Cottage at the Soldiers' Home: Washington, D.C. 1869–1876 Ulysses S. Grant: Ulysses S. Grant Cottage [5] Long Branch, New Jersey: 1877–1881 Rutherford B. Hayes: Spiegel Grove: Fremont, Ohio: 1886–1888 Grover Cleveland: Oak View Upon Red Top [6] Washington, D.C ...
Watercolor of Washington Irving's encounter with George Washington, painted in 1854 by George Bernard Butler Jr. The Irving family settled in Manhattan, and were part of the city's merchant class. Washington was born on April 3, 1783, [ 1 ] the same week that New York City residents learned of the British ceasefire which ended the American ...
This is a list of properties and districts in Washington, D.C., on the National Register of Historic Places. There are more than 600 listings, including 74 National Historic Landmarks of the United States and another 13 places otherwise designated as historic sites of national importance by Congress or the President. [1]
The Arlington Hotel, 1872. The Arlington Hotel was a hotel in Washington, D.C.. It was built in 1868 and was considered the most opulent hotel in Washington, D.C. during the post-Civil War era, [1] described as a "distinctive but low-keyed example of the Second Empire style." [2] The hotel was located at Vermont Avenue and I Street, N.W. in ...
The Queen Anne style house in 1895; built of terracotta brick, it was unpainted until 1960. The house at One Observatory Circle was designed by architect Leon E. Dessez and built in 1893 for $20,000 (equivalent to $678,222 in 2023) for the use of the superintendent of the Naval Observatory who was the original resident.