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A Brief History of the Stone House. Prince William County, Virginia (July 1995) Litterst, Michael D. The Stone House: Silent Sentinel at the Crossroads of History. (July 2005) OCLC 40274086. McDonald, JoAnna M. "We Shall Meet Again": The First Battle of Manassas (Bull Run), July 18–21, 1861. (Oxford University Press, 1999).
Stone House (Sun Valley, California), on the List of Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monuments in the San Fernando Valley Tuttle Creek Ashram , also known as The Stone House Stone House (Lakewood, Colorado), on the National Register of Historic Places listings in Jefferson County, Colorado
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The Stone House was built of local stone in 1853–54 by Robert Sterling. His wife was the first non-Indian woman to enter the Coyote Valley. In 1861, when Lake County was split off from Napa County, John Cobb was hired to manage the Rancho Guenoc and Rancho Collayomi of the Ritchie estate. He moved with his wife and younger children into the ...
The original house was an important part of the 1776 Battle of Long Island during the American Revolutionary War. At one time, the Old Stone House was the clubhouse of the Brooklyn Superbas, who later became the Brooklyn Dodgers. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2012. [1]
A modern country-house hotel, 10 minutes from Windermere’s lakeshore, it has expanded from the original Edwardian house at its core to offer a variety of rooms and suites across its 21 acres.
The Poe Museum is located at the "Old Stone House", built circa 1740 [3] [4] and cited as the oldest original residential building in Richmond. [5]It was built by Jacob Ege, [6] [7] who immigrated from Germany to Philadelphia in 1738 and came to the James River Settlements and Col. Wm. Byrd's land grant (now known as Richmond) in the company of the family of his fiancée, Maria Dorothea ...
The main house was built in 1757, and is a two-story, stone house with a slate gable roof. Porches were added during the 20th century. Also on the property is a stuccoed brick ice house (c. 1900), bunk house (1905), and a barn / garage (c. 1910). [2] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1994. [1]