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Broad Margin is the name given to the private residence originally commissioned by Gabrielle and Charlcey Austin. It is located in Greenville, South Carolina, United States, was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright and was built by local builder Harold T. Newton in 1954.
Whitehall is one of Greenville’s oldest residences. It was built by Henry Middleton in 1813 and served as Middleton’s summer home until 1820. Middleton’s father, Arthur Middleton was a signer of the Declaration of Independence, president of Continental Congress, a US Senator, and a member of the SC House of Representatives.
Stone for the random bond masonry was in part taken from a mid-nineteenth-century grist mill on the Reedy River owned by Greenville founder Vardry McBee. [5] Walter Gassaway died of a heart attack on June 4, 1930. The following year his widow abandoned Isaqueena for a smaller home (which she also designed) closer to downtown Greenville. [6]
The Lanneau-Norwood House (Lanneau-Norwood-Funderburk House [2] or "Alta Vista" [3]) is a historic, late 19th-century house on Belmont Avenue in Greenville, South Carolina. [4] The house is an outstanding example of Second Empire architecture in the American South and is one of the last surviving Victorian-era homes in Greenville. [5]
As Thanksgiving approaches, Greenville area restaurants are prepping to make the 2023 celebration more convenient, delicious and less stressful.
By the 1920s, the park "had become central to Greenville life," and it was the site of numerous Sunday school and cotton mill picnics, concerts, dances, and family reunions. [4] From 1935 to 1941, it was renovated by the Works Progress Administration ; and in 1941, Sears, Roebuck and Company donated $7,500 toward the building of a stone shelter ...
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Wilkins House being moved, September 6, 2014. The Wilkins House is a historic house in Greenville, South Carolina, built in 1878 by Jacob W. Cagle (1832–1910) for merchant and capitalist William T. Wilkins (1825–1895).