Results for Bremo
National Historic Landmark - Bremo Historic District
This group of 19th-century houses and farm buildings is si...
Bremo
The nearby Bremo properties include three separate houses,...
Curles Neck and Bremo
Curles Neck may take its name from the curls of the river ...
Site of John Bremond & Company
New York native John Bremond (1813-1866) built a dry goods...
West-Bremond Cottage
Built as servants’ quarters about 1872, this “Shotgun” hou...
Results for Bremo
National Historic Landmark - Bremo Historic District
This group of 19th-century houses and farm buildings is significant as an architectural and social document. The main brick residence has Palladian architectural features popularized by Thomas Jefferson, whose advice was sought on the building plans. Two other main 19th-century ...
Bremo
The nearby Bremo properties include three separate houses, all built by planter, soldier and reformer Gen. John Hartwell Cocke (1780 - 1866) on his family's 1725 land grant. The three properties - Bremo, Lower Bremo, and Recess - and their ...
Curles Neck and Bremo
Curles Neck may take its name from the curls of the river or a family of that name. Richard Cocke, the Immigrant, patented land along the James River on the eastern side of the neck in 1636. There he built ...
Site of John Bremond & Company
New York native John Bremond (1813-1866) built a dry goods store at this site as early as 1847. Soon, his dry goods department faced Pecan (Sixth) Street, and the grocery department faced Brazos Street. Active civically, he served as a ...
West-Bremond Cottage
Built as servants’ quarters about 1872, this “Shotgun” house stood at 604 San Antonio near the home of Charles S. West (1829-1885), lawyer and Texas Supreme Court Justice. In 1885 banker Eugene Bremond (1832-1910) acquired it. Emma Grant West (1865-1952), ...