Often, the best restaurants in Missouri are hidden in little towns but now the secret is out. Check out these 10 restaurants that are well worth finding.
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AD revisits the magnificent homes of Britain's monarchs
Ahead of season 2, Tatler revisits the show’s beautiful settings
On November 25, 1899, The Seattle Star reports that Wyatt Earp (1848-1929), an "ex-sheriff from Arizona," is preparing to open a new gambling house in the infamous part of town south of Yesler Street
Dodington Park, Gloucestershire was owned by the Codrington family from the 16th century to 1980. The current house was built by James Wyatt by 1813. The estate is now owned by James Dyson.
One of the two niches on either side of a door in the oval saloon at Castle Coole, County Fermanagh. Designed 1789-96 by James Wyatt for the first Earl of Belmore the building’s heating syste…
Two of Britain’s greatest-ever architects, Christopher Wren and James Wyatt, have been linked with the creation of Fawley Court.
Queen Anne with Steamboat Gothic-style 2-tier wrap-around porches, designed by Rickman and Bills, Nashville • During the Civil War, Hugh Bright Douglas served under Generals Nathan Bedford Forrest and Joe Wheller. • now Wyatt Antiques • National Register #82003986, 1982
When it comes to houseguests, Petronella Wyatt thought she had had them all: decadents, dyseptics, drunks and deviants, but one particular visitor really did outstay their welcome.
Two of Britain’s greatest-ever architects, Christopher Wren and James Wyatt, have been linked with the creation of Fawley Court.
This 1940's Georgian house remodel by Emily Wyatt of Wyatt Designs is the right combination of fresh style and antique tradition. Take a peek!
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Tombstone, Cochise County, Az Oct 22, 2011 — Wyatt Earp, an interesting man, in interesting times. Spent his early years in Iowa, Kansas, and Texas. He became a good lawman, but that wasn't his only interests. Indoors his life seemed to revolve around the saloon and it's enterprises. Outside he was a hunter of buffalo, copper, gold, and of men. Books, TV shows, and movies have tried to record his life and the 30-second gunfight he is known for, the gunfight at the OK Corral. Tucson Photographer, Jim Purcell - 030 - ____________________ I imported and tagged the photo with Photo Mechanic. I used Adobe Lightroom for adding color profiles, basic adjustments, and creating TIFFS. I used Photomatix to tone-map the images into an HDR image. I spruced-up the image using the Topaz plug-ins: Denoise, Detail, and Adjust, then touched-up the image using Adobe Photoshop. PENTAX K-5 SMC Pentax-DA 18-250mm ƒ3.5-6.3 ED AL [IF]
Lee Priory room, 'The Strawberry Room', English, 1783-1794, designed by James Wyatt
Castle Coole - Enniskillen On the outskirts of Enniskillen, Co. Fermanagh stands Castle Coole, the family home of the Earls of Belmore and one of the treasures of the National Trust. Designed by Jame…
Orchardleigh House, Frome, Somerset, Built by Thomas Henry Wyatt for The Duckworth family in 1855 it is now a very successful Wedding Venue (archive image)
Granny Weatherwax’s Cottage 1000 piece jigsaw for the Discworld Emporium 2018
In pictures: some of Britain's finest architectural follies.
Carol Wyatt is an Animation Production Designer, Art Director, Painter, Illustrator, and Graphic Designer. I contacted Carol to discover more about the fascinating world that she works in. When did…
Walpole's private rooms open for the first time since the 18th century
photo by Alice Lum On the morning of Wednesday, November 12, 1902 the funeral of Thomas H. Lowerre, Jr. was held in the parlor of his fashionable townhouse at No. 45 East 67th Street. The impressive house was one of many similar brownstone homes built half a century before in the upper-middle class neighborhood. That neighborhood was changing, however. As the turn of the century arrived, so did the wealthiest of New York society who were gradually inching up Fifth Avenue along Central Park, filling its side streets with chic, updated residences. On February 25, 1911 James R. Sheffield purchased the house from the Lowerre estate. A prominent and wealthy attorney, Sheffield commissioned architect Walter B. Chambers to design a mansion to replace the Lowerre house – one that would reflect the family’s position and social status. Five stories tall and completed in 1913, the 20-room mansion featured a white marble base with two deeply recessed arched openings. One sheltered the double-doored entrance, accessed by two extremely shallow marble steps; the other provided access to the American basement behind a handsome wrought iron fence. Carved Beaux Arts details of oak leaves and ribbons embellished the first floor. Above, a three-sided oriel window rose through the second and third floors, creating a balcony to the fourth story. Above it two striking hooded dormers pierced the mansard roof. photo by Alice Lum Sheffield’s wife was the former Edith Tod, granddaughter of David Tod who was both the Governor of Ohio and United States Minister to Brazil. The couple was as active politically as they were socially; Mrs. Sheffield holding the posts of vice-president and governor of the Women’s National Republican Club, vice-president of the Union Settlement, and a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution, Colonial Dames of America and the Daughters of the Cincinnati. Upon Calvin Coolidge’s election in 1924, Sheffield was appointed Ambassador to Mexico, a post he would hold for three years. Later President Herbert Hoover named him Special Ambassador to Venezuela to present a statue of Henry Clay to that country. When in town, the Sheffield house was the scene of dinner parties, dances and teas until James R. Sheffield died in 1938. Edith Tod Sheffield remained on at No. 45 East 67th Street for nearly two decades. She died in June 1956. The year that James Sheffield was appointed Ambassador to Mexico, Reginald Claypoole Vanderbilt and his wife, Gloria, celebrated the birth of their only child, Gloria Vanderbilt. The little girl’s life would be a tumultuous one. Her father died when she was 18 months old and a scandalous custody battle later ensued between her mother and her aunt, Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, who felt Gloria’s mother was unfit. After three failed marriages, Gloria met and married screenwriter and author Wyatt Cooper in 1964. The newlyweds purchased No. 45 East 67th and moved in along with Gloria’s two sons by her former husband, conductor Leopold Stowkowski. Within the next two years two more sons would be born – Carter and Anderson. The styles of the 1960s were avante garde and splashy designer Gloria Vanderbilt was right in the middle of it all. In addition to her fashion designing, she threw herself headlong into interior design. American quilts became her signature theme. The designer lined entire rooms of the mansion with quilts – even the ceilings were fair game. Later a grown-up Anderson Cooper would recall the floors of his bedroom being covered with quilts, which were then shellacked. The interiors were striking, if perhaps not quite in the taste of Edith Tod Sheffield. The master bedroom in 1970. The walls, ceiling and floor were quilted by Gloria -- photo by Horst P. Horst from "Horst: Interiors" Wyatt E. Cooper died unexpectedly of a heart ailment on January 5, 1978. Years later Gloria Vanderbilt Cooper would reminisce “Always, when I go by there I look at the wisteria vine in front of that house because Carter and Anderson and I were there when their father, Wyatt, planted that vine. It was a little tiny foot-high wisteria. Now it’s grown up over the whole building.” The wisteria vine planted by Wyatt Cooper still twines up the facade -- photo by Alice Lum The imposing house at No. 45 East 67th Street remains a private home, its outward appearance unaltered during the past century. And the wisteria vine still twines up the façade.