Richmond-Tufts House

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Richmond-Tufts_House an entity of type: Thing

The Richmond-Tufts House is a historic house in rural Ouachita County, Arkansas, outside the county seat of Camden. This single-story wood-frame house was built in 1853, and was originally located on West Washington Street in Camden, before being moved to its present location c. 1961. When first built, the house had Greek Revival styling, but it was extensively renovated and extended after its purchase in 1883 by Alfred Tufts, who moved from the northern United States to Camden after the American Civil War, married a local woman, and acquired a great deal of land. He made numerous Late Victorian additions to the house, most of which were undone when the house was moved, restoring its original Greek Revival character. The house is five bays wide, with a side gable roof, and a four-column po rdf:langString
rdf:langString Richmond-Tufts House
rdf:langString Richmond-Tufts House
rdf:langString Richmond-Tufts House
xsd:float 33.6069450378418
xsd:float -92.90860748291016
xsd:integer 43125771
xsd:integer 1111596051
xsd:date 1977-12-02
rdf:langString less than one acre
rdf:langString N.W. Richmond
rdf:langString Arkansas#USA
rdf:langString Location in Arkansas##Location in United States
xsd:integer 77000264
xsd:string 33.606944444444444 -92.90861111111111
rdf:langString The Richmond-Tufts House is a historic house in rural Ouachita County, Arkansas, outside the county seat of Camden. This single-story wood-frame house was built in 1853, and was originally located on West Washington Street in Camden, before being moved to its present location c. 1961. When first built, the house had Greek Revival styling, but it was extensively renovated and extended after its purchase in 1883 by Alfred Tufts, who moved from the northern United States to Camden after the American Civil War, married a local woman, and acquired a great deal of land. He made numerous Late Victorian additions to the house, most of which were undone when the house was moved, restoring its original Greek Revival character. The house is five bays wide, with a side gable roof, and a four-column porch that extends across a portion of the front. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1977.
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xsd:string 77000264
xsd:gYear 1853
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