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Waverley is a mansion, formerly a plantation house and now a historic house museum, in Clay County, Mississippi, ten miles east of West Point. Built in the 1838, it is architecturally unique among Mississippi's antebellum mansions for its enormous octagonal cupola. It was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1973. [2]
Waverly Mansion is a historic home located at Marriottsville in Howard County, Maryland, USA. It was built circa 1756, and is a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2 -story Federal style stone house, covered with stucco, with a hyphen and addition that date to circa 1811.
HO-21, Waverley, 2335 Waverly Mansion Drive, Marriotsville; HO-22, Doughoregan Manor (Charles Carroll III of Carrollton House), 3500 Old Manor Lane, Ellicott City; HO-23, Burleigh Manor and Gate House (Burleigh Cottage), 3950 White Rose Way, Ellicott City; HO-24, Font Hill, 3838 Parrot Drive, Ellicott City
The main hallway in the Culbertson Mansion in New Albany, Indiana. Sept. 28, 2021 WHAT: Scaring visitors since 1985, the Culbertson Mansion’s annual haunted house is full of thrills and chills ...
Waverly is a mansion in Leesburg, Virginia that was built for Robert Townley Hempstone (1842–1913) about 1890. The turreted frame house combines the Queen Anne style with elements of Colonial Revival architecture. Hempstone, a Baltimore businessman, retired to the property that was then on the southern outskirts of Leesburg.
Waverly is a historic home located at Croom in Prince George's County, Maryland. The house, constructed in 1855, is a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2 -story, two-part Italianate -style frame house. The casing of the principal entrance is a combination of both the Greek Revival and Italianate styles.
The Breakers mansion was commissioned to be built by railroad tycoon Cornelius Vanderbilt II in 1893 and quickly became the summer home for the Vanderbilt family for generations to come,
Charles E. Knox, who owned a refinery in Covington, Oklahoma, purchased his mansion from Joseph McCristy, president of the Enid Mill and Grain Company. The mansion was built in 1909 in the Neo-Classical style and designed by R.W. Shaw. [3] Knox also owned another site listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the Knox Building.