List of American houses
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- Arlington House (the Custis-Lee Mansion): the home of Robert E. Lee, the grounds of which became Arlington National Cemetery.
- Belcourt Castle: the summer mansion of Oliver Belmont, American Rothschild banking heir.
- Belmont Mansion: home of William Peters in Philadelphia
- Biltmore Estate: the largest private home in the United States, built by George Vanderbilt. It is located outside Asheville, North Carolina.
- The Breakers: Newport, one of the most ambitious residences of the Gilded Age and an architectural landmark.
- Boldt Castle: legendary island estate, one of America's largest private residences.
- Cà d'Zan: Ringling mansion, Sarasota, Florida
- Camp Pine Knot: the earliest of the Great Camps of the Adirondacks, a National Historic Landmark
- Dark Island: fantasy castle by Ernest Flagg "(Singer Castle").
- Eames House: the residence of Charles and Ray Eames
- Elephant House: the house of Edward Gorey, artist, writer, illustrator, playwright, and puppeteer
- Fallingwater: a Frank Lloyd Wright designed house in Bear Run, Pennsylvania
- The Frick Collection: former residence of steel magnate Henry Clay Frick, adjacent Central Park in Manhattan, New York City
- Gamble House: the residence of David Gamble (of Procter & Gamble) in Pasadena, California built by Greene & Greene
- Glessner House: Chicago, H. H. Richardson, architect.
- Gracie Mansion: official residence of New York City's mayor
- Grange Estate: Haverford, Pennsylvania, built in 1700, home of patriot John Ross
- Hearst Castle: the grand mansion of publisher William Randolph Hearst at San Simeon, California
- House of Seven Gables: home of author Nathaniel Hawthorne in Salem, Massachusetts
- Hull House: Jane Addams' settlement house for immigrants and the poor in Chicago, Illinois
- Hunziker House: Several houses named "Hunziker House" in Indiana, Iowa, and New York
- Lovell House by Richard Neutra
- Lower East Side Tenement Museum, a six-story brick tenement building that was home to an estimated 7,000 people, from over 20 nations, between 1863 and 1935, in New York City
- Margaret Mitchell House and Museum: the house where Margaret Mitchell wrote Gone with the Wind
- Molly Brown House: home of Unsinkable Molly Brown, the famous RMS Titanic survivor in Denver, Colorado
- Monticello: the personal house of Thomas Jefferson, President of the United States
- Moore House
- Mount Vernon: the residence of President George Washington in Alexandria, Virginia
- Neverland Ranch, the home of musician Michael Jackson, in Santa Barbara County, California
- The Playboy Mansion: magazine publisher Hugh Hefner's mansion
- Edgar Allan Poe National Historic Site, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- Edgar Allan Poe House and Museum, Baltimore, Maryland
- Rose Hill: a restored Greek Revival mansion, a National Historic Landmark on Seneca Lake near Geneva, New York.
- Sagamore Camp: one of the Great Camps of the Adirondacks, a National Historic Landmark.
- Santanoni Preserve: one of the Great Camps of the Adirondacks, a National Historic Landmark.
- Ira C. & Charles S. Van Noy Houses: Kansas City, MO, residences of Ira Clinton and Charles S. Van Noy, members of the Van Noy Brothers of Kansas City and co-founders of HMSHost (formerly, the Van Noy Railway News and Hotel Company).
- Villa Vizcaya: John Deering mansion, Miami, Florida
- Von Sternberg House
- The White House: Residence of the President of the USA
- Winchester Mystery House: The haunted mansion of Winchester Rifle heiress, Sarah Winchester
- Wrigley Mansion: former home of William Wrigley, Jr., of the famous chewing gum company, now headquarters of the Tournament of Roses Association in Pasadena, California