After leading a life in the military, Col. Francis Hoppin became a leading architect whose work still stands in the city of Newport. Throughout the 1910s, Hoppin was commissioned by many looking to build property in the city. Some of his work include Sherwood on Bellevue Avenue, Armesa Hall, and a marble tablet in Trinity Church dedicated to Alfred G. Vanderbilt
The first installment of this article in the last issue of Newport History explored the collaboratio...
Drawing of the Hoppin Homestead building (circa 1878-1892) located at 283 Westminster Street, Provid...
The Breakers is a Vanderbilt mansion located on Ochre Point Avenue in Newport, Rhode Island. It is a...
After leading a life in the military, Col. Francis Hoppin became a leading architect whose work stil...
The Edward King House was the largest and most lavish mansion built in Newport during the city’s ris...
In 1874, the young architect Charles Follen McKim (1847-1909) participated in the compilation of a s...
Although little known today, even among architectural historians, John Dixon Johnston (1849-1928) wa...
The Walter C Cureton House is located at 202 Lincoln Ave, Newport, Tennessee. Architect: O.P. Ailey ...
Beginning in the late 1940s, efforts towards the construction of a bridge linking Jamestown to Newpo...
Detail, decorative woodwork on gable, north end of Bellevue Avenue facade; The complex was commissio...
Milton H. Sanford was a business associate of Commodore Cornelius Vanderbilt in New York and made hi...
The Newport Bridge, later renamed to honor Senator Claiborne Pell, opened in1969, linking the Newpor...
The Breakers is the grandest of Newport\u27s summer cottages and a symbol of the Vanderbilt family...
The first installment of this article in the last issue of Newport History explored the collaboratio...
Drawing of the Hoppin Homestead building (circa 1878-1892) located at 283 Westminster Street, Provid...
The Breakers is a Vanderbilt mansion located on Ochre Point Avenue in Newport, Rhode Island. It is a...
After leading a life in the military, Col. Francis Hoppin became a leading architect whose work stil...
The Edward King House was the largest and most lavish mansion built in Newport during the city’s ris...
In 1874, the young architect Charles Follen McKim (1847-1909) participated in the compilation of a s...
Although little known today, even among architectural historians, John Dixon Johnston (1849-1928) wa...
The Walter C Cureton House is located at 202 Lincoln Ave, Newport, Tennessee. Architect: O.P. Ailey ...
Beginning in the late 1940s, efforts towards the construction of a bridge linking Jamestown to Newpo...
Detail, decorative woodwork on gable, north end of Bellevue Avenue facade; The complex was commissio...
Milton H. Sanford was a business associate of Commodore Cornelius Vanderbilt in New York and made hi...
The Newport Bridge, later renamed to honor Senator Claiborne Pell, opened in1969, linking the Newpor...
The Breakers is the grandest of Newport\u27s summer cottages and a symbol of the Vanderbilt family...
The first installment of this article in the last issue of Newport History explored the collaboratio...
Drawing of the Hoppin Homestead building (circa 1878-1892) located at 283 Westminster Street, Provid...
The Breakers is a Vanderbilt mansion located on Ochre Point Avenue in Newport, Rhode Island. It is a...