Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
First floor plan for the Dana–Thomas House. The Dana–Thomas House (also known as the Susan Lawrence Dana House and Dana House) is a Prairie School–style home at 301 East Lawrence Avenue in Springfield, Illinois, designed by architect Frank Lloyd Wright. It was built in 1902–1904 for the philanthropist Susan Lawrence Dana.
The project grew and became a blonde Roman brick mansion with 35 rooms on 16 different levels. An anomaly in Springfield, the Dana Thomas House is a masterpiece that still stands today as one of Wright's finest Prairie designs. [9] Lawrence Dana paid $45,000 for the construction and an additional $15,000 for the Wright-designed furnishings.
Cook House 508 S 8th St c. 1850 Cranmer-Cook House 926 South 7th Street 1877 Italianate Dana-Thomas House: 301 E Lawrence Ave 1902-1904 Prairie Style: July 30, 1974 Decker House 303 S Glenwood Ave 1864 Italianate Elijah Iles House: 628 S 7th St 1837 Greek Revival February 23, 1978 Executive Mansion: 410 E Jackson St 1855 Italianate July 19, 1976
The Feast Buffet, 3101 S. MacArthur Blvd., is seen on Wednesday, June 12, 2024. The restaurant's owner says the business will be a "Dave & Buster's concept."
The A La Carte column highlights restaurant openings, closings, renovations and relocations, as well as personnel changes and business news. Natalie Morris can be reached at 217/737-7254 or by ...
The Lawrence Memorial Library in Springfield, Illinois, was designed by American architect Frank Lloyd Wright for client Susan Lawrence Dana in 1905. Wright had previously designed Dana's Springfield residence, now known as the Dana–Thomas House, in 1902. Dana commissioned the library for the West Room of the Rheuna D. Lawrence School. [1]
The Dana–Thomas House is a Frank Lloyd Wright design built in 1902–03. Wright began work on the house in 1902. Commissioned by Susan Lawrence Dana, a local patron of the arts and public benefactor, Wright designed a house to harmonize with the owner's devotion to the performance of music.
Looking back. In 1983, Mary Lou Dobrydnia was a 29-year-old Peoria resident who taught and coached at Limestone Community High School in Bartonville.