Designed by Elizabeth Lord and Edith Schryver, who founded the first woman-owned landscape architecture firm in the Pacific Northwest, the house and gardens are regionally important for the design and historical signifcance of the landscape architects and the house architect, Clarence Smith.
The mid-nineteenth century Gothic Revival house retains many original building elements, and is culturally significant as it was a home to Oregon's black pioneers, Hannah and Eliza Gorman., National Register of Historic Places (Listed, 2015)
The mid-nineteenth century Gothic Revival house retains many original building elements, and is culturally significant as it was a home to Oregon's black pioneers, Hannah and Eliza Gorman.
The mid-nineteenth century Gothic Revival house retains many original building elements, and is culturally significant as it was a home to Oregon's black pioneers, Hannah and Eliza Gorman.
This unique Queen Anne style building has an eight-sided tower build by the owner, Peter John Lindberg, a prominent citizen in nothern Curry County, Oregon.
The mid-nineteenth century Gothic Revival house retains many original building elements, and is culturally significant as it was a home to Oregon's black pioneers, Hannah and Eliza Gorman.
The mid-nineteenth century Gothic Revival house retains many original building elements, and is culturally significant as it was a home to Oregon's black pioneers, Hannah and Eliza Gorman.
The mid-nineteenth century Gothic Revival house retains many original building elements, and is culturally significant as it was a home to Oregon's black pioneers, Hannah and Eliza Gorman., National Register of Historic Places (Listed, 2015)
Constructed in 1915 and renovated in 1944 by Pietro Belluschi, the farmhouse has an open floor plan and maintains the original designs of the architect.