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The Henry family then purchased the house for $873,400. The new owners estimated a repair at at least the cost of sale, and hired an architect and a designer to restore it. [6] Fritz Harding estimates the house is eligible for the National Register of Historic Places, and hopes the current owner's renovations will lead to its listing. [11]
The property is located in the city's Franklin Park neighborhood and is a contributing part of the Columbus Near East Side District, listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The site's buildings were built between 1882 and 1920 to serve public transit in Columbus, including horsecars, streetcars, and buses. It became vacant in the ...
The Charles Frederick Myers house is a historic private residence in the Franklin Park neighborhood of Columbus, Ohio.The house was built in 1896 in an eclectic style. It was added to the Columbus Near East Side District (part of the National Register of Historic Places) in 1978, and the Bryden Road District (part of the Columbus Register of Historic Properties) in 1990.
In 1910 the development was annexed to the City of Columbus and in 1912 Glen Echo Park was dedicated to the city. Most of the homes in the Glen Echo neighborhood were built between 1909 and 1943 and include American Craftsman style bungalows, Shingle Style , Tudor Revival and Colonial Revival , many with front and/or sleeping porches.
Milo-Grogan is a neighborhood of Columbus, Ohio.The neighborhood was settled as the separate communities of Milo and Grogan in the late 1870s. Large-scale industrial development fueled the neighborhood's growth until the 1980s, when the last factories closed.
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It is on a 2-acre (0.81 ha) plot by the Olentangy River and on the western end of Weisheimer Road, named for the original owner. [1] The building contains two stories, an attic, and a basement. The first floor has a kitchen, parlor, dining room, den, office, and half-bath. The second includes four large bedrooms and two full bathrooms.
The Henderson family farmed the land, with 18 barns on the property, until the 1930s. In 1938, Arthur H. Dierker purchased the house and 68 of its acres. Dierker Road is named for him; it was once a private road to the house from Henderson Road, named for the Henderson family. [3]