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Historical marker ()The Snowden-Gray mansion is located on East Town Street in Downtown Columbus, close to Topiary Park. [1] The surrounding Town-Franklin neighborhood is considered the city's first suburb, first subdivided in the 1840s, with early fashionable residences constructed in the 1850s, and its lots filling in during the subsequent prosperous decades. [2]
The first house was purchased in 1919 and had been built in 1905 for Charles H. Lindenberg, a local business owner and a founder of M.C. Lilley and Company. The house served as the official residence of the Ohio Governor until the late 1950s after the house became dilapidated and needed extensive repairs and renovations.
First President of the Cleveland Stock Exchange [47] He and his wife Alice were benefactors of the Washington National Cathedral, and Smithsonian Institution in Washington D.C. 1826 / @1930 [48] 00000 / 4,270. First House demolished 1930's, Care Takes House enlarged and remodeled. From 1940 to 1960 it was part of Cole's Nursery, Now a Private ...
Built for William Hass, today is a house museum Ashe/Crocker Mansion 1883 Queen Anne: Curlett & Cuthbertson: San Francisco: Built for Aimee Crocker (Charles Crocker's niece) and Richard Potter Ashe, it was badly damaged in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and destroyed by fire in 1913 more images: Sarah Winchester House: 1884: Queen Anne ...
The Joseph Henderson House, also known as the A.H. Dierker House, is a historic farmhouse in Columbus, Ohio. The house was built in 1859 by Joseph Henderson for him, his wife, and their ten children. The family lived on-site until the 1930s, when Arthur H. Dierker's family moved in, living there until 1983.
The mansion was built from 1835 [1] or 1836 to 1838 for Alfred Kelley. [5] Kelley was a notable politician and lawyer, responsible for the Ohio and Erie Canal and Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad. [6] The house cost a reported $15,000 to construct, and involved transporting stone via flatboats. [2]
The majority of the mansion was built around the mid-1850s for M.L. Neville, who purchased the property in an 1855 sheriff's sale for $5,310. In 1857, it was rented out to the state of Ohio, when it became the first home to the Ohio Asylum for the Education of Idiotic and Imbecile Youth (known today as the Columbus Developmental Center). [2]
The first leg of their journey ended in Brownsville, Pennsylvania, where the Bettses lived for a number of years. In 1800, the family decided to resume their push westward on a flatboat, travelling down the Ohio River. Upon arriving in the region, the Betts family attempted to obtain a plot of land in Lebanon; however, the deed proved to be faulty.