Hampton Lillibridge House
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hampton_Lillibridge_House an entity of type: Thing
The Hampton Lillibridge House is a historic home in Savannah, Georgia, United States. It is located at 507 East St. Julian Street, in the southwestern civic/trust lot of Washington Square, and was built around 1797. One of the oldest extant buildings in Savannah, it is now part of the Savannah Historic District. In a survey for the Historic Savannah Foundation, Mary Lane Morrison found the building, constructed by Rhode Island native Hampton Lillibridge, to be of significant status. It is one of Savannah's few clapboard houses to have survived the fire of 1820.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Hampton Lillibridge House
rdf:langString
Hampton Lillibridge House
rdf:langString
Hampton Lillibridge House
xsd:float
32.07830429077148
xsd:float
-81.08608245849609
xsd:integer
70828273
xsd:integer
1090054947
xsd:integer
507
rdf:langString
The building in the mid-20th century at its original location at 310 East Bryan Street
rdf:langString
circa
xsd:integer
4
rdf:langString
Savannah, Georgia, U.S.
xsd:string
32.0783034041 -81.086084285
rdf:langString
The Hampton Lillibridge House is a historic home in Savannah, Georgia, United States. It is located at 507 East St. Julian Street, in the southwestern civic/trust lot of Washington Square, and was built around 1797. One of the oldest extant buildings in Savannah, it is now part of the Savannah Historic District. In a survey for the Historic Savannah Foundation, Mary Lane Morrison found the building, constructed by Rhode Island native Hampton Lillibridge, to be of significant status. Lillibridge died at Shandy Hall, near Savannah, on February 14, 1801, after contracting yellow fever. His widowed second wife, Anna Orford, sold the house, at which point it became a boarding house. It is one of Savannah's few clapboard houses to have survived the fire of 1820. The home originally stood at 310 East Bryan Street, about 600 feet (180 m) away, in the northwestern residential lot of the adjacent Warren Square. The property was bought by James Arthur Williams in 1969. He moved it to its current location and restored it.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
4584
rdf:langString
507 East St. Julian Street
xsd:string
circa
xsd:positiveInteger
4
<Geometry>
POINT(-81.086082458496 32.078304290771)