Emmert-Zippel House

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Emmert-Zippel_House an entity of type: Thing

The Emmert-Zippel House is a historic house located at 3729 Maryville Road in Granite City, Illinois. William Emmert built the house in 1837. He married the following year. Then, he and his family lived in the house. At the time, the house was located in a rural setting in Granite City, which was then known as Six Mile due to its distance from St. Louis. The house is a five-bay I-house, a housing style named for its popularity in Illinois, Indiana, and Iowa. I-houses, including the Emmert-Zippel House, were two-story structures with two rooms on each floor connected by a central hall and staircase. Emmert lived in the house until 1881, and his family sold the house to August and Elizabeth Zippel in 1884. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Emmert-Zippel House
rdf:langString Emmert-Zippel House
rdf:langString Emmert-Zippel House
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xsd:integer 42032230
xsd:integer 1090528881
xsd:date 1996-05-02
rdf:langString I-house
rdf:langString Comprehensive view from across the road
xsd:integer 3279
rdf:langString Illinois#USA
xsd:integer 96000511
xsd:string 38.721944444444446 -90.10416666666667
rdf:langString The Emmert-Zippel House is a historic house located at 3729 Maryville Road in Granite City, Illinois. William Emmert built the house in 1837. He married the following year. Then, he and his family lived in the house. At the time, the house was located in a rural setting in Granite City, which was then known as Six Mile due to its distance from St. Louis. The house is a five-bay I-house, a housing style named for its popularity in Illinois, Indiana, and Iowa. I-houses, including the Emmert-Zippel House, were two-story structures with two rooms on each floor connected by a central hall and staircase. Emmert lived in the house until 1881, and his family sold the house to August and Elizabeth Zippel in 1884. The Zippel family lived in the house until 1984, when the Old Six Mile Historical Society bought the house and made it a museum, known as the Old Six Mile Museum. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on May 2, 1996.
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xsd:gYear 1837
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