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Here’s a look at some of the most beautiful historic homes in USA

A Victorian with a beautiful and unique porch and balcony in Massachusetts, photo by @thefrontdoorproject

Queen Anne built in 1902 in Lynchburg, VA, photo by @young_preservationist

The Captain George Flavel House Museum known also as Capt. George Flavel House and Carriage House is now a house museum in Astoria, Oregon, United States. It was built in 1885 in the Queen Anne architectural style, by George Flavel, a Columbia River bar pilot who was one of the area’s first millionaires.

The 11,600-square-foot (1,080 m2) house, which spans a whole city block, features Queen Anne architecture. After Flavel’s death in 1893, his wife, Mary Christina, lived in the house with the couple’s daughters, Nellie and Katie, until her death in 1922. Both Katie and Nelly also lived in the home until their deaths in 1910 and 1933, respectively.

The house and its carriage house were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.

French second empire style mansion in Savannah, GA, photo by @donald_boerger

The Eddleman–McFarland House, sometimes known as the Ball–Eddleman–McFarland House or just the McFarland House, is a historic residence built in 1899 in the Quality Hill section of Fort Worth, Texas.

The house on the bluff above the Trinity River was built in 1899 in the area then known as Quality Hill. This neighborhood contained many of the large Victorian homes of the “Cattle Baron Families”, few of which are still standing. Howard Messer designed the house for Sarah Ball, who died within five years of the house’s construction. William Eddleman, founder of the Western National Bank, then bought the house. His daughter, Carrie McFarland, lived in the house until her death in 1978. Eddleman’s bank was founded in 1906 and failed in 1913. Photo by Downtown Fort Worth

The Omeyer House built in 1889 in Saint Paul, MN, photo by @summit_avenue

The California Governor’s Mansion is the official residence of the Governor of California, located in Sacramento, the capital of California. Built in 1877, the estate was purchased by the Californian government in 1903 and has served as the executive residence for 14 governors since. Since 1967, the mansion has been managed by California State Parks as the Governor’s Mansion State Historic Park. The mansion was not occupied by governors between 1967 and 2015 and is again unoccupied since 2019. Photo by @thejoynextdoor

The Frick Mansion built in 1892 in Pittsburgh, PA, photo by @courtneyskiptonlong

Newton Carmean House built in 1890 in Marshalltown, IA

Seaview Terrace, also known as the Carey Mansion, is a privately owned mansion located in Newport, Rhode Island. It was designed in the French Renaissance Revival Châteauesque style and completed in 1925. It was the last of the great “Summer Cottages” constructed and is the fifth-largest of Newport’s mansions, after The Breakers, Ochre Court, Belcourt Castle, and Rough Point. The television show Dark Shadows used its exterior as the fictional Collinwood Mansion

In 1907, whiskey millionaire Edson Bradley built a French-Gothic mansion on the south side of Dupont Circle in Washington, D.C. It covered more than half a city block, and included a Gothic chapel with seating for 150, a large ballroom, an art gallery, and a 500-seat theatre — 90 feet by 120 feet, and several stories tall, completed in 1911—known as Aladdin’s Palace.

In 1923, Bradley began disassembling his Washington, D.C. mansion and relocating it to a Newport property at Ruggles and Wetmore avenues. Sea View, the 1885 Elizabethan-Revival mansion already on the site, was incorporated into the design, and lent its name to the new chateau

Missoula, Montana, photo by @shaunagoodgold

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