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Tuck was born in Annapolis, Maryland on November 20, 1808. He was a son of William Archable Tuck and Cave Williams (née Mulliken) Tuck.His grandfather was Revolutionary War soldier William Tuck and his uncle was Washington Greene Tuck, a prominent Annapolis furniture maker who was Superintendent of the Maryland State House and a veteran of the War of 1812.
The site was at one time the location of the Annapolis terminus of the Washington, Baltimore and Annapolis Electric Railway, and was known as the "Best Gate" station, which had three single-ended and four double-ended sidings, where rail cars could be shunted on or off of the single-track WB&A east–west railway which ran to the north–south Baltimore and Ohio Railroad and Pennsylvania ...
Thomas Somerville Stewart (1806 – May 3, 1889) was a Philadelphia architect, engineer, and real estate developer. Personal life. Thomas Somerville Stewart was ...
Annapolis, Maryland: 1764 Residence Mitchell House: Fair Hill, Maryland: 1764 Residence Long Island Farm: Parkville, Maryland: 1764 Farm Galloway Mansion: Queenstown, Maryland: 1764 Residence Moved from its original location at Easton, Maryland in 2019. John Ridout House: Annapolis, Maryland: 1764–1765 Residence Cross Manor: St. Inigoes ...
View north at the south end of MD 178 at MD 450 in Parole. MD 178 begins at a four-way intersection featuring MD 450 in Parole. MD 450 heads west as Defense Highway and southeast as West Street toward an interchange with U.S. Route 50 (US 50)/US 301 (John Hanson Highway) and Annapolis; the east leg of the intersection is an entrance to the Westfield Annapolis shopping mall.
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Thomas Somerville, 1st Lord Somerville (died 1434), Lord of the Parliament of Scotland Thomas Somerville (minister) (1740–1830), Scottish minister, antiquarian and amateur scientist Sir Thomas de Somerville (c. 1245–1300), Scottish noble
Aid was sought to pay for the structure, and the Commonwealth offered a $25,000 loan while the City of Richmond donated $2,000. The board chose the noted Philadelphia architect, Thomas Somerville Stewart, who had just completed the new St Paul's Episcopal Church, to construct the new building. Stewart chose for his design the Egyptian Revival ...