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Results for White House

Whitehouse Veterans Monument

This memorial is dedicated to all the men and women that served in the armed forces of The United States. Their honorable and dedicated service to The United States of America will never be forgotten.

Marker is at the intersection of ...

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Whitehouse Saloon

Dickinson's Saloon

The Whitehouse Saloon

The Whitehouse Saloon was thought to first open as Whitehouse in the late “Teens” under the management of H.B. “Moses” Elder and his brother Emmett Elder. It was closed down by Prohibition in 1920 and operated as ...

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Pettigrew-White-Stamps House

Side 1:

Circa 1830

Pettigrew - White – Stamps House

Home of the Upson Historical Society

Side 2:

Placed in Memory of James Hightower

1777 – 1851

William Gaines Andrews

1796 – 1875

By Mr. and Mrs. Wm. H. Hightower, Jr.

Marker is at the intersection of South ...

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The Whiteoak House

C. 1840

Architecturally the Whiteoak House is representative of vernacular buildings constructed in Chesapeake City in the 1840's and 50's. Old timers in Chesapeake City claim this house rests on the 1st lot sold in town. In 1854, Richard Bayard leased ...

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Jennie Whiteoak House

C. 1864

This home is recognized for having the "Dunnage" or scrap wood that was removed from passing ships and used as siding. Also called the Reeves House as Pop Reeve's lived here from 1951 to 1985. A complete restoration in ...

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The Little White House

The miniature house was built in 1927 by the park caretaker, E.V. Kelly. It was one of his many winter projects. He traveled to Mapleton, Kansas to find the perfect rocks for the walls.

His daughters, Nadine and Jenny, spent many ...

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White HouseTract

The 500-acres parcel of land long known as the “White House Tract” witnessed many of Augusta’s most significant historical events. On this tract an Indian trading company known as MacKay’s Trading Post, or the White House, flourished. Around this establishment ...

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Old White Meeting House and Cemetery

(Text front)

This church was established in 1696 by settlers from Dorchester, Mass., for which the town of Dorchester was named. This brick sanctuary, built ca. 1700, was occupied and then burned by British troops in 1781. The church was ...

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White House of the Confederacy

Built in 1818 as the residence of Dr. John Brockenbrough, this National Historic Landmark is best known as the executive mansion for the Confederate States of America, 1861-1865. President Jefferson Davis and is family lived here until Confederate forces evacuated ...

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The Little White House

Franklin D. Roosevelt came to Warm Springs in 1924 in hopes of recovering from the effects of polio. His love for the area and hopes for the Georgia Warm Springs Foundation led him to build a small white clapboard cottage ...

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