Adam Thoroughgood House
The Thoroughgood House is a brick house located at 1636 Parish Road, in the neighborhood of Thoroughgood, in Virginia Beach. It was built ca. 1719. It was formerly known as the Adam Thoroughgood House.
The Thoroughgood House is a brick house located at 1636 Parish Road, in the neighborhood of Thoroughgood, in Virginia Beach. It was built ca. 1719. It was formerly known as the Adam Thoroughgood House.
Alibi Bar New Orleans stands in one of the most storied entertainment districts in America, where music, nightlife, and old architecture blend into the rhythm of the city.
One of the most significant locations associated with the society is the Old Jail Museum in Allegan. Built in 1906, the structure originally served as both a residence for the county sheriff and a functioning jail, reflecting a common design of the era.
The Andrew Johnson House in Raleigh, North Carolina, is best known as the early home connected to Andrew Johnson, who would later become the seventeenth President of the United States.
The Butte Clerk of the Court is tied to the long civic history of Butte, Montana, a city that rose rapidly during the late nineteenth century as one of the richest mining centers in the United States.
The Captain Nathaniel Lord Mansion in Kennebunkport, Maine, was constructed in the early nineteenth century during a time when maritime trade defined the prosperity of the region.
Castillo de San Marcos, the oldest fort in the United States, was constructed between 1672 and 1695 by the Spanish living on Matanzas Inlet for the protection of the northern most outpost of the empire, Saint Augustine.
The Chapel of the Cross in Madison, Mississippi, stands as one of the most recognizable historic churches in the region, rooted in the antebellum era of the American South.
The Charles Q. Clapp House stands in Portland, Maine, as one of the city's most admired examples of grand residential architecture from the nineteenth century.
Cincinnati Music Hall stands as one of the most recognizable landmarks in Ohio, rising in the Over the Rhine district across from Washington Park.
Colton Hall Museum stands in Monterey as one of the most important public buildings in early California history.
The Country House of Clarendon Hills has been a familiar landmark in Clarendon Hills, Illinois, since the early twentieth century.
Coyote Joes Bar in Prescott stands in one of the most historic districts of Arizona.
The Daytona Playhouse is one of the longest-running community theater organizations in Florida. Its roots reach back to the years after World War Two when local residents wanted to build a permanent home for live theater in Daytona Beach.
Duke Mansion stands in the Myers Park neighborhood of Charlotte and began as a private residence in 1915.
The Egyptian Theatre stands along Main Street in Park City, Utah, and traces its origins back to an earlier entertainment venue on the same site.
The Glore Psychiatric Museum is part of a complex of St. Joseph, Missouri, museums, along with the Black Archives Museum, the St. Joseph Museum, and the American Indian and History Galleries.
The Grant-Humphreys Mansion, a Beaux-Arts style mansion in Denver, Colorado, was built in 1902 for James Benton Grant, the third Governor of Colorado, and later purchased by the Humphreys family, known for their involvement in the oil industry.
Manassas National Battlefield Park is a unit of the National Park Service located in Prince William County, Virginia, north of Manassas, that preserves the site of two major American Civil War battles.
Joint Base Lewis-McChord has its origins in the early twentieth century when the United States military sought a strategic location in the Pacific Northwest for training and defense.
Long-standing performing-arts hub featuring musicals, comedies & dramas, plus acting classes.
The location of Ocean Key West Resort in Key West, Florida, has a history that stretches back to the early days of the island in the nineteenth century.
St. Paul's historic Landmark Center, completed in 1902, originally served as the United States Post Office, Courthouse, and Custom House for the state of Minnesota. It was designed by Willoughby J. Edbrooke, who served as Supervising Architect of the U.S.
The hotel now known as Le Pavillon Hotel stands in the heart of New Orleans and traces its origins back to the early twentieth century.
Lucky's Tavern became a familiar name in downtown Fort Lauderdale during the early 2010s when it opened in the Historic Himmarshee District, one of the city's best-known nightlife corridors.
One of the most notable burials at Machpelah Cemetery is the famous illusionist Harry Houdini, whose grave has drawn visitors for decades.
Meeting Street Inn stands in the heart of Charleston, South Carolina, along one of the city's most historic corridors.
Memorial Union is located on the south shore of Lake Mendota on the campus of the University of Wisconsin–Madison. On the lakeshore to the north of the building is the Terrace, a popular outdoor space overlooking the lake.
The New York State Capitol, the seat of the New York state government, is located in Albany, the capital city of the U.S. state of New York.
The Piper Opera House in Virginia City, Nevada, traces its origins back to the early boom years of the Comstock Lode when the town was one of the richest mining centers in the United States.
Resurrection Cemetery is most famously associated with the legend of Resurrection Mary, one of the most enduring ghost stories in American folklore.
Soule Chapel Methodist Cemetery is a small rural burial ground located near the community of Smoot in Greenbrier County, West Virginia. Zona Heaster Shue, known as the Greenbrier Ghost, was buried there.
The Stambaugh Building rises in the heart of downtown Youngstown as one of the city's most recognizable early twentieth-century landmarks.
The 1790 Inn and Restaurant stands in the historic district of Savannah and is considered one of the city's best-known historic lodging properties.
The Cabbage Patch Settlement House, founded in 1910 by Louise Marshall in Louisville's "Cabbage Patch" neighborhood, is a Christian-based non-profit organization that provides programs and services.
In 1923, it was purchased by PJ McMahon and Sons and transformed into a large funeral home. This marked the beginning of its deep connection to death care and the funeral industry in New Orleans.
The World Museum of Mining is a museum and memorial in Butte, Montana. Chartered in 1964 as a non-profit educational corporation, the Museum first opened in July 1965.
The Tuck Museum Complex in Hampton, New Hampshire, traces its origins back to 1925 when local leaders sought to preserve the story of one of the oldest settlements in the region.
The building is known as one of the most haunted places in Orlando. In the quiet hours, listen for footsteps and whispers from souls of funeral home residents who extended their stay.
Victory Gardens Theater began in Chicago in 1974 during a time when the city's theater scene was rapidly expanding.
Western Kentucky University, known as The Hill, is a public university in Bowling Green, Kentucky. It was founded by the Commonwealth of Kentucky in 1906, though its roots reach back a few decades earlier.
The Wolf Creek Inn in Wolf Creek, Oregon, traces its origins back to the early days of westward expansion and the gold rush era.
The Woodburn Governor's House in Dover, Delaware, traces its origins back to the late eighteenth century when the land itself had already carried a long colonial history.