Piazza
Broader term: Mansion
Found in 113 Collections and/or Records:
Four Children Sitting on Piazza, 1937
Front view of Washington's home, Mt. Vernon, June 22, 1915
Governor Strom Thurmond of South Carolina and Party on the East Lawn at Mount Vernon, October 1, 1948
Group at Mount Vernon, 1868-1869
Harrison Dodge with Honorary Doctorate from George Washington University, 1931-1932
Holly Tree #128 and Pecan Tree #129, December 1931
King Albert I and Vice President Thomas Marshall on the Piazza at Mount Vernon, October 29, 1919
Laurance H. Hart (as George Washington) at Mount Vernon, 1932
Locust Grove, December 1934
Locust Grove--North Lawn, August 1, 1939
Memorandum, New Room chimney and Piazza windows, 1796
Memorandum in the hand of George Washington with dimensions of architecdtural details in and around the house -- piazza at west door: brick pavement between the tiles 5 feet 3 inches by 9 feet 6 inches; tiles are 12" square; stone margin around them of 6" on outer edge, 9" on inner next the house. --gives measurements of windows in the new room; the Venetian window is given in exact detail; the two smaller (or end windows); the dimensions of the chimney in the new room in detail.
Mount Vernon Mansion, piazza from north end, Prior to November 15, 1935
Mount Vernon Mansion, piazza from south end, Undated
Mount Vernon Mansion, piazza from south end, Undated
Mount Vernon Mansion restoration, 1957
Mt. Vernon on the Potomac, June 22, 1915
Paul I, King of the Hellenes and Queen Frederika on the Piazza at Mount Vernon, October 29, 1953
Piazza of Washington's Mansion, Mount Vernon, East Front., April 1873
Plan, Piazza flooring, undated
Portico at the East Front of the Mansion at Mt. Vernon, 1878-1883
Views of Mount Vernon spanning more than 100 years. The Robert Waldsmith Collection consists of approximately 300 stereographs and cabinet cards by Alexander Gardner, N. G. Johnson, Luke D. Dillon, and others. Highlights of the collection include: several west front views of the Mansion, including the earlist known one by Frederick Langenheim, circa 1856; an early view of the tomb, circa 1857, and a collection of Washington statues and buildings honoring the first President.