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Sally Jessy Raphael's home for sale. The three-story, 43-room, 17-bedroom, nine-bath (plus four powder rooms) mansion sits on the crest of Quaker Hill, at the end of a gated drive, where a porte ...
The property sale would include eight homes, various horse stables, ponds, and a private jet. [64] In December 2013, the property was renamed Sunset Springs Ranch. [65] In July 2014, CSD had plans to add a wedding chapel to the property. [66] The ranch was put up for sale again in September 2014, at a cost of $30 million. [67]
Formwalt's planters are in the top 4.5% of landowners, translating into real estate worth $6,000 or more in 1850, $24,000 or more in 1860, and $11,000 or more in 1870. [49] In his study of Harrison County, Texas , Randolph B. Campbell classifies large planters as owners of 20 people, and small planters as owners of between 10 and 19 people. [ 50 ]
James White bought the property in the mid 1870s and it became his primary race horse-stud. White was a highly successful breeder, his horses won five A.J.C. Derbys, five A.J.C. Sires' Produce Stakes, five V.R.C. St Legers and six V.R.C. Derbys between 1877 and 1890. The attention paid to the design and construction of the stables by White and ...
The property also includes a pair of clapboarded wood-frame barns, additional stables (built about 1850 and destroyed by fire), greenhouse (converted to a garage in 1910, then to a residence in 1965), the square brick gardener's cottage, and a 1 + 1 ⁄ 2-story gatehouse.
A mews is a row or courtyard of stables and carriage houses with living quarters above them, built behind large city houses before motor vehicles replaced horses in the early twentieth century. Mews are usually located in desirable residential areas, having been built to cater for the horses, coachmen and stable-servants of prosperous residents.
Green Dot Stables, a slider bar in Lansing, is closing its doors. Its owners hope to reopen, lease or sell the 12,000-square-foot restaurant by the fall.
The John Lair House and Stables, at the northeast corner of U.S. Route 25 and Hummel Rd. in Renfro Valley, Kentucky, was built in 1944. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1995. The listing included two contributing buildings. [1] Its conceptual design was by John Lair; the architect was Wayne W. Haffler.