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This is a list of American houses by state.
California
Bidwell Mansion : home of
John Bidwell and
Annie Bidwell in
Chico, California
Bourn Mansion ;
Georgian -style mansion built for
William Bowers Bourn II and his wife, Agnes Moody Bourn in
Pacific Heights , San Francisco, California
Carolands : the 65,000 sq ft mansion of Harriet Pullman Carolan in
Hillsborough, California .
Eames House : the residence of
Charles and Ray Eames
El Fureidis : the
Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue house owned by
Sergey Grishin in
Montecito, California
Filoli : a free
Georgian style mansion built for
William Bowers Bourn II and his wife, Agnes Moody Bourn in
Woodside, California ; the setting for the American soap opera
Dynasty
Gamble House : the residence of David Gamble (of Procter & Gamble) in
Pasadena ,
California built by
Greene & Greene .
Garden of Alla : an estate owned by actress
Alla Nazimova in
West Hollywood, California during the 1920s. It was demolished in 1959.
George W. Marston House : 1905 home of
George Marston and wife, Anna Marston. Located in
Balboa Park ,
San Diego, California .
Harold Lloyd Estate : is a large mansion and landscaped estate located in the
Benedict Canyon section of
Beverly Hills, California ; residence of silent film star
Harold Lloyd
Hearst Castle : the grand mansion of publisher
William Randolph Hearst at
San Simeon ,
California
Lovell House by
Richard Neutra
Neverland Ranch , the home of musician
Michael Jackson , in
Santa Barbara County, California
The Playboy Mansion : magazine publisher
Hugh Hefner 's mansion
Pickfair : the former
Beverly Hills, California residence of film actors and married couple
Mary Pickford and
Douglas Fairbanks .
The Manor : a
Châteauesque mansion and the former residence of television producer
Aaron Spelling , it is located in the
Holmby Hills neighborhood of
Los Angeles, California , and is currently listed as the most expensive home in the United States
Von Sternberg House
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
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
District of Columbia
Florida
Georgia
Illinois
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Beauport : the waterfront summer residence of
Henry Davis Sleeper in
Gloucester, Massachusetts
Castle Hill : a stately mansion and estate of 21 outbuildings situated in Ipswich, Massachusetts north of Boston; the summer residence of Richard T. Crane Jr.
Elephant House : the house of
Edward Gorey , artist, writer, illustrator, playwright, and puppeteer
Elm Court : the largest
Shingle style architecture house in America was home to William Douglas Sloane and
Emily Thorn Vanderbilt in
Lenox, Massachusetts
Hammond Castle : the 1920s stone castle and laboratory of inventor
John Hays Hammond Jr. in
Gloucester, Massachusetts
House of the Seven Gables : fictionalized by author
Nathaniel Hawthorne in
Salem ,
Massachusetts
Kennedy Compound : a
clapboard (architecture) home located in
Hyannis Port, Massachusetts , and the residence of the
Kennedy family including American businessman and political figure
Joseph P. Kennedy Sr. , his wife
Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy , and their three sons, U.S. President
John F. Kennedy and U.S. Senators
Robert F. Kennedy and
Ted Kennedy
Naumkeag : the
Shingle Style summer residence of
Joseph Hodges Choate in
The Berkshires
Peacefield : a Colonial style mansion and the former residence of U.S. President
John Adams , and other members of the
Adams family , located in
Quincy, Massachusetts near
Boston
The Mount : a country house in
Lenox, Massachusetts , the home of noted American author
Edith Wharton , who designed the house and its grounds.
Ventfort Hall : the
Jacobean mansion of George and Sarah Morgan which is now the Gilded Age Museum in
Lenox, Massachusetts .
Michigan
New Hampshire
New York
Arden House :
[3] the 100,000 sq ft mansion of railroad magnate
Edward Henry Harriman in
Harriman, New York
Boldt Castle : legendary island estate, one of America's largest private residences
Boscobel : the
Federal style estate of States Dyckman by the
Hudson River in
Garrison, New York
Camp Pine Knot : the earliest of the Great Camps of the
Adirondacks , a National Historic Landmark
Charles W. Goodyear House ; home of lawyer and businessman
Charles W. Goodyear in
Buffalo, New York
Coindre Hall : the 30,000 square foot mansion of pharmaceutical magnate George McKesson Brown in
Huntington, New York
Coe Hall : the 67-room mansion of
William R. Coe in
Oyster Bay, New York
Cornelius Vanderbilt II House : the largest private residence ever constructed in
New York City was home to the eldest grandson of tycoon
Cornelius Vanderbilt
Dark Island : fantasy castle by
Ernest Flagg "(Singer Castle")
Eagle's Nest : the residence of
William Kissam Vanderbilt II in
Centerport, New York , now home to a museum and planetarium
Edgewater : in Barrytown, New York, built about 1825.
The
Frick Collection : former residence of steel magnate
Henry Clay Frick , adjacent
Central Park in
Manhattan ,
New York City
Gracie Mansion : official residence of
New York City 's mayor
Harriet Phillips Bungalow
Harbor Hill : the
Gold Coast, Long Island estate of
Clarence Hungerford Mackay was one of the 10 largest residences in America
Hempstead House : the massive Gould-Guggenheim estate, and now park, on Long Island's gold coast in
Sands Point, New York
Hyde Park : the
Hudson Valley estate of Frederick W. Vanderbilt.
Indian Neck Hall : a Georgian-style country residence of
Frederick Gilbert Bourne located on the Great South Bay in
Oakdale, New York
Inisfada: the huge
Tudor Revival mansion of
Nicholas Frederic Brady on
Long Island
Kykuit : the residence of oil tycoon
John D. Rockefeller in
Tarrytown on the
Hudson River
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 .
Mills Mansion : the
Beaux-Arts mansion of financier Ogden Mills on the
Hudson River in
Staatsburg, New York .
Oheka Castle : also known as the Otto Kahn Estate, it is a large country estate located on the Gold Coast of Long Island's north shore, at Huntington, Suffolk County, New York, and was the residence of financier and philanthropist
Otto Kahn
Petit Chateau : a
Châteauesque mansion for
William Kissam Vanderbilt and
Alva Vanderbilt at 660 Fifth Avenue, New York City
Red Maples : in the Village of Southampton, New York.
Rose Hill Mansion : 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
Sagamore Hill (House) : the home of President
Theodore Roosevelt in
Cove Neck, New York
Santanoni Preserve : one of the Great Camps of the Adirondacks, a National Historic Landmark
Springwood Estate : a
Federal and
Italianate mansion in
Hyde Park, New York ; the birthplace, lifelong home, and burial place of
Franklin D. Roosevelt ; added as a National Historic Site in 1945
Templeton : the
Georgian Revival mansion of
Alfred I. du Pont in
Brookville, New York , now the DeSeversky Conference Center.
Westbrook : the
Long Island mansion of
William Bayard Cutting .
Winfield Hall : the ornate former residence of
Frank Winfield Woolworth on Long Island in
Glen Cove, New York
North Carolina
Ohio
Pennsylvania
Belmont Mansion : home of
William Peters in
Philadelphia ,
Pennsylvania
Clayton : the Pittsburgh home of industrialist
Henry Clay Frick
Elstowe Manor : the 60,000 sq ft mansion of
William L. Elkins in
Elkins Park, Pennsylvania
Fallingwater : a
Frank Lloyd Wright designed house in
Bear Run ,
Pennsylvania
Grange Estate :
Haverford, Pennsylvania , built in 1700, home of patriot
John Ross
Lynnewood Hall : the
Neoclassical mansion of industrialist and art collector
Peter A. B. Widener in
Elkins Park, Pennsylvania
Edgar Allan Poe National Historic Site ,
Philadelphia ,
Pennsylvania
Whitemarsh Hall : the 100,000 sq ft mansion of
Edward T. Stotesbury designed by
Horace Trumbauer outside
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania .
Rhode Island
Beechwood : a mansion and the former residence of Caroline Astor in
Newport, Rhode Island
Belcourt Castle : the summer mansion of
Oliver Belmont , American banking heir
Blithewold : an 1896 waterfront mansion and gardens in
Bristol, Rhode Island
The Breakers : Newport, one of the most ambitious residences of the
Gilded Age and an architectural landmark
Carey Mansion : a
Châteauesque mansion and the residence of liquor millionaire
Edson Bradley in
Newport, Rhode Island
Chateau-sur-Mer : a French villa and the former residence of
William Shepard Wetmore in
Newport, Rhode Island
Chepstow : the 1860s
Italianate summer home of Edmund Schermerhorn in
Newport, Rhode Island
Hammersmith Farm : A Victorian mansion and estate in
Newport, Rhode Island ; the residence of
Hugh D. Auchincloss and childhood home of
Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis
Isaac Bell House : a
Shingle style house and "summer cottage" of
Isaac Bell Jr. in
Newport, Rhode Island
Kingscote : a
Gothic Revival house, museum, and the former residence of
George Noble Jones in
Newport, Rhode Island
Marble House : a
Beaux-Arts architecture style mansion and residence of
William Kissam Vanderbilt in
Newport, Rhode Island
Miramar : a French neoclassical-style mansion and the summer residence of
George Dunton Widener in
Newport, Rhode Island
Ochre Court : a large
Châteauesque mansion and the residence of Ogden Goelet in
Newport, Rhode Island
The Elms : a
Classical Revival mansion and the "summer cottage" of
Edward Julius Berwind in
Newport, Rhode Island
Rosecliff : a mansion built for
Theresa Fair Oelrichs in
Newport, Rhode Island
Rough Point : an English
manorial style mansion and the residence of
Frederick William Vanderbilt in
Newport, Rhode Island
Vernon Court : a French classical style "summer cottage" of the young widow of Richard A. Gambrill, Anna Van Nest Gambrill in
Newport, Rhode Island .
Vinland Estate : a
Romanesque Revival sandstone mansion built for
Catharine Lorillard Wolfe in
Newport, Rhode Island .
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
The Beehive House : built in 1854 by
Brigham Young , the house is located in
Salt Lake City, Utah . The house gets its name from the beehive sculpture atop the house.
The Lion House : a second residence built by
Brigham Young in 1856. Located in Salt Lake City, Utah, it was built to accommodate his large family due to a polygamous lifestyle. The house's name references a lion statue above the front entrance.
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
Wisconsin
See also
References
States Non-states Related topics