Tudor Place, 1644 Thirty-first Street, Northwest, Washington, District of Columbia, DC
Summary
Significance: An unusual, perhaps unique, execution of late Federal period architecture, designed by William Thornton, Tudor Place also possesses outstanding historical significance for its association with prominent nineteenth-century personages and its role s the center of nineteenth-century Georgetown social life, and its extensive archives documenting early two hundred years of upper class lifestyle. Having been continually owned by the Peter Family until the death of Armstead Peter, III), Tudor Place, in addition, has a rare degree of integrity in terms of the building and grounds, and possessions (especially those associated with George and Martha Washington). The formal garden north of the house and the expansive lawn south of the house also reflect nearly two hundred years of American garden design....
Unprocessed Field note material exists for this structure: N660
Survey number: HABS DC-171
Building/structure dates: after. 1805- before. 1816 Initial Construction
Building/structure dates: 1914 Subsequent Work
Building/structure dates: after. 1960- before. 1970 Subsequent Work
Building/structure dates: ca. 1876 Subsequent Work
National Register of Historic Places NRIS Number: 67000025
This is another AI-assisted collection, this time it features 20K+ images of manors. A manor is a large country house with lands, the principal house of a landed (country) estate. This collection took about 15 minutes to make, including adding about 18,000 relevant images as "manors" and removing portraits of people with "Manor" last names. Of course, image recognition was already done before and that process required much much longer time and machine resources. Please contact us if you need large image sets or need to tag your own large collections using our neural networks.