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Results for Jones House

46. T.W. Jones House

T.W. Jones House. 5032 Henry Street. 1928. Bungalow. This house exhibits Craftsman style. The pyramidal roof with intersecting side gables gives the appearance of a cross-gabled roof.

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35. T.W. Jones House

T.W. Jones House. 5055 Combs Street. 1928. Bungalow.
The house was built by T. W. Jones. The
house still exhibits elements of Craftsman
style which include the chamfered posts
resting on brick piers, and the continuous
porch.

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23. Bray-Jones House

23. Bray-Jones House. 5093 Canal Street. Circa 1922. Bungalow. The house was built by B.W. Bray. The
Bungalow exhibits Craftsman style with its
exposed rafters, and integral/continuous
porch underneath its hipped roof This is
also the former location of Mt. ...

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Dorsey--Jones House

Between 1850 and 1859, the Dorsey-Jones House was the home of two escaped slaves, Basil Dorsey and Thomas H. Jones.  Basil Dorsey, originally enslaved in Frederick County, Maryland, escaped slavery with his brothers after the denial of promised freedom ...

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The Jones Point Lighthouse

Shedding Light on a Landmark

In the 1850's, Alexandria was one of the busiest seaports in the Chesapeake region. To help guide Potomac River ship traffic, the federal government built the Jones Point lighthouse, illuminating the beacon for the first time ...

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Jones House

1858

The Oldest Brick Home

in Pontiac, Illinois

A restoration project of the

Livingston County Historical Society

The Jones House

is listed on the

National Register

of Historic Places

Marker is on East Madison Street, on the right when traveling east.

Courtesy hmdb.org

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Ware - Baker - Jones House

Built c. 1859 by Henry H. Ware, this house exemplifies the picturesque eclecticism which dominated Alabama architecture after 1850. It mixes elements of the older neoclassicism with the newer Victorian trends.

Prominent owners through the years have included Madison Jackson Williams, ...

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Ervin "Casey" Jones House

Circa 1932

This adobe brick building was built by Deloy Abbott circa 1932. Behind the house was another adobe building used as a chicken coop. Ervin Jones purchased the home in 1941 and lived here until his death. The house was ...

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Governor Jones House

Thomas Goode Jones, governor of Alabama from 1890-1894, occupied this house during his long political career which took him from the Montgomery City Council to a federal judgeship. During his two terms as governor, his home was the Executive Mansion ...

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The Jones House

On this site, the southeast corner of Second and Market Streets on Market Square, stood the Jones House, a mid-Nineteenth Century Hotel, which later evolved into the larger Commonwealth Hotel and later, the Dauphin Building. It was here that Abraham ...

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