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The Perry County Jail Museum, or just the Perry County Jail, in Pinckneyville, Illinois, is one of the two Registered Historic Places in Perry County, Illinois. The other listed site is found in Du Quoin, the Du Quoin State Fairgrounds. The Perry County Jail has been on the Register since August 2000.
Design Architect : Samuel Hannaford style: Italianate architecture location:
108 W. Jackson St.
Pinckneyville, Illinois
continue to profile page : open in new page/tab Salem Methodist Episcopal Church and Parsonage (also known as Salem United Methodist Church; Salem Methodist Church) is a historic church and parsonage at 810 York Street in Newport, Kentucky.
It was built in 1882 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1986.
Built: 1882 Design Architect : Samuel Hannaford location:
continue to profile page : open in new page/tab Mary A. Wolfe House is a registered historic building in Cincinnati, Ohio, listed in the National Register on March 3, 1980.
Built: 1888 Design Architect : Samuel Hannaford style: Romanesque architecture location:
965 Burton Ave.
Cincinnati, Ohio
continue to profile page : open in new page/tab The Charles A. Miller House is a historic residence in Cincinnati, Ohio, United States. Built in 1890 according to a design by Samuel Hannaford, it is a two-and-a-half story building constructed in the Gothic Revival structure.:5 A brick and limestone structure with a slate roof, its facade is dominated by courses of ashlar, plus battlements at the top,:5 and a prominent portico at the entrance. The floor plan is that of a rectangle, two bays wide and four bays deep; the right portion of the building features a gable, while the battlements appear primarily on the left side. Structurally, the house is supported by a post and lintel construction, with the exterior courses of stones forming the lintels as well as horizontal bands around the building.Built: 1890 Design Architect : Samuel Hannaford style: Victorian architecture location:
1817 Chase St.
Cincinnati, Ohio
continue to profile page : open in new page/tab H.W. Derby Building is a registered historic building in Cincinnati, Ohio. The building was designed by architect Samuel Hannaford. It listed in the National Register on March 3, 1980.
The firm of H. W. Derby & Co. acted as a jobbing outlet "for such large eastern houses as Harpers and Appleton", operated the largest and most elaborate bookstore in the West, and was well known in the Ohio Valley. H. W. Derby had an extensive publishing business of law books, medical books, and "miscellaneous" publications, "his law book line being unrivaled in the West" and his works of history, biography and travels, "received a new impetus with the passage of the act establishing the Ohio School Library in 1853." This law, "which Derby had zealously promoted, provided a tax for the support of libraries in school districts throughout the state, and the books for these collections were largely supplied by Derby from the publications of Harpers (who in 1839 had secured a monopoly to supply the New York School District libraries), Appleton, Derby & Jackson, and his own house."
Design Architect : Samuel Hannaford style: Italianate architecture location:
300 W. 4th St.
Cincinnati, Ohio
continue to profile page : open in new page/tab The Charles B. Russell House (also known as the "Druffel Building") is a historic residence in the Clifton neighborhood of Cincinnati, Ohio, United States. Built in 1890 in the Richardsonian Romanesque style, it is a large two-and-a-half-story house constructed primarily of limestone. Multiple windows, including several dormer windows, pierce all sides of the turret, while another large dormer window with Palladian influences is present on the house's southern side. A common theme in the design of the house's windows are string courses of stone that connect the windows and voussoirs that radiate out from the windows to many directions. Among its most distinctive architectural elements are the heavy stone front porch, which transitions from a verandah on one end to a sun porch on the other end, and the large circular turret on the front corner of the house, which is capped with a beehive-shaped pinnacle.Built: 1890 Design Architect : Samuel Hannaford style: Victorian architecture location:
3416 Brookline Ave.
Cincinnati, Ohio
buildings close to Winton Place Methodist Episcopal Church