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History of Early American Landscape Design

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  • style at Belfield in Germantown, Pennsylvania, the Gothic at Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, and the Grecian at Monticello. Charles Willson Peale’s Chinese
    44 KB (5,866 words) - 14:29, April 1, 2021
  • world.” [Fig. 2] Fessenden, Thomas Green, January 25, 1823, “National Burying Ground” (New England Farmer 1: 206) “This grave-yard contains an area of two
    23 KB (3,312 words) - 10:24, August 6, 2020
  • 2000 and 2002, for example, archaeologists uncovered the Park Cemetery, a burial ground for enslaved African-Americans, which was located on the southern
    78 KB (10,171 words) - 00:22, August 25, 2021
  • monuments and cemetery projects, including a fifteen-foot obelisk for the monument to John Harvard (1607–1638) in the Phipps Street Burial Ground in Charleston
    8 KB (910 words) - 22:55, August 11, 2021
  • small, and it should be on a moderate rise of ground. There should be a spacious open lawn or grass ground in front, which should be unoccupied by any objects
    108 KB (14,954 words) - 15:38, August 13, 2021
  • Language (1755: 1:n.p.) “CHURCHYARD. n.s. The ground adjoining to the church, in which the dead are buried; a cemetery.” Society for the Encouragement of Arts
    70 KB (9,898 words) - 18:52, August 12, 2021
  • books preserve decisions such as walling a church yard or relocating a burying ground. In the case of the Mall in Washington, DC, federal documents reveal
    160 KB (19,096 words) - 16:27, September 1, 2021

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