Cora Bryant Wheeler House

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Cora_Bryant_Wheeler_House an entity of type: Thing

The Cora Bryant Wheeler House, also known as the Mrs. House, is a historic house located in Portland, Oregon, United States. Architect A. E. Doyle designed this 1923 Arts and Crafts house to take full advantage of its prominent and demanding ridgetop location. The land was purchased by Coleman and Cora in 1918 from the Frank Dekum family. The house's complex lines and massing articulating the shape of the hill, and notably including a significant amount of lumber from the Wheelers' own timberlands in the Coast Range, the Wheeler House became an important later addition to the portfolio that made Doyle one of Portland's leading architects. Junior partner Pietro Belluschi and apprentice Richard Sundeleaf, each of whom later became a significant architect in his own right, provided on-site c rdf:langString
rdf:langString Cora Bryant Wheeler House
rdf:langString Cora Bryant Wheeler House
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rdf:langString lightgreen
rdf:langString Portland Historic Landmark
xsd:date 1990-02-23
rdf:langString Photograph of a house.
rdf:langString Robertson, Hay & Wallace
xsd:integer 1923
rdf:langString The Wheeler House in 2013.
xsd:integer 90000295
xsd:integer 1841
rdf:langString Portland downtown
rdf:langString Map of location in Portland.
rdf:langString Location of the Wheeler House in Portland.
xsd:integer 90000295
rdf:langString National Register of Historic Places photographic file
xsd:string 45.5146 -122.697986
rdf:langString The Cora Bryant Wheeler House, also known as the Mrs. House, is a historic house located in Portland, Oregon, United States. Architect A. E. Doyle designed this 1923 Arts and Crafts house to take full advantage of its prominent and demanding ridgetop location. The land was purchased by Coleman and Cora in 1918 from the Frank Dekum family. The house's complex lines and massing articulating the shape of the hill, and notably including a significant amount of lumber from the Wheelers' own timberlands in the Coast Range, the Wheeler House became an important later addition to the portfolio that made Doyle one of Portland's leading architects. Junior partner Pietro Belluschi and apprentice Richard Sundeleaf, each of whom later became a significant architect in his own right, provided on-site construction supervision. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1990. Cora died in 1951. Their daughter, Marguerite, still resided in the house, selling it in 1953.
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