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The Stibral Homestead and Farmstead was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in April 1980 as part of the Northern and Central Townships of Yankton County multiple property listing. Photograph from nomination, June 1977.
The Stibral Homestead and Farmstead historic buildings consisted of the original house, a bowed barn, and two other out-buildings. Constructed in 1880, the log and clapboard house had one small window in each gable end and two single door entries, one on the north and one on the south facade.
Valclav Stibral, a Czechoslovakian immigrant, received the patent for this land in 1880. Valclav held the land until 1917, at which time he sold it to his son Charles Stibral, who held it until the 1950's. At the time of listing, the property was still in the Stibral family.
Bucharest, Romania. The conical structure is an outdoor cooking area.
The Village Museum in Bucharest is one of the first open-air ethnographic museums in the world. opening to the public in 1936. It is an outdoor collection of original buildings showcasing the folk traditions of Romania’s villages and includes churches, farmsteads, houses and windmills from the historic regions of Dobrogea, Moldavia, Oltenia and Transylvania.
Home with vegetable garden.
Bucharest, Romania.
The Village Museum in Bucharest is one of the first open-air ethnographic museums in the world. opening to the public in 1936. It is an outdoor collection of original buildings showcasing the folk traditions of Romania’s villages and includes churches, farmsteads, houses and windmills from the historic regions of Dobrogea, Moldavia, Oltenia and Transylvania.
The same little church at Szentendre skanzen as before.
The texture I used here is Watercolor 04 from dancingshiba Thanks! :-)
Bucharest, Romania.
The Village Museum in Bucharest is one of the first open-air ethnographic museums in the world. opening to the public in 1936. It is an outdoor collection of original buildings showcasing the folk traditions of Romania’s villages and includes churches, farmsteads, houses and windmills from the historic regions of Dobrogea, Moldavia, Oltenia and Transylvania.
Although it has long been owned by people of Czech descent, the Albion Walker House was built by an Anglo farmer who used a modified L-shape layout but modeled much of his construction technique after that of his Czech neighbors with locally-available materials. Resting on a foundation of granite field stones, the walls were constructed of dressed chalkrock blocks, which were covered with a clay and plaster veneer. Walker sold the farm to Joseph Ptak in c.1900.
The Walker House was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in July 1987 as part of the Czech Folk Architecture in Southeastern South Dakota thematic submission. Photograph from NRHP submission, taken 1985.
Bucharest, Romania.
The Village Museum in Bucharest is one of the first open-air ethnographic museums in the world. opening to the public in 1936. It is an outdoor collection of original buildings showcasing the folk traditions of Romania’s villages and includes churches, farmsteads, houses and windmills from the historic regions of Dobrogea, Moldavia, Oltenia and Transylvania.
1. Gebirgs-Jäger-Regiment 100 Brannenburg, 1939.
Möglicherweise: "Subkarpaten", "Karpatenvorland Polen".
Haus in Schwarzweiss-Streifen.
Województwo podkarpackie.
"Die Woiwodschaft Karpatenvorland ist eine von 16 Woiwodschaften der Republik Polen. Sie befindet sich im Südosten des Landes am Fluss San. Im Süden grenzt die Woiwodschaft an die Slowakei und im Osten an die Ukraine. Die einzige Großstadt des Karpatenvorlandes ist die zentral gelegene Hauptstadt Rzeszów." Wikipedia.
Skanzen in my hometown revisited. I had bad lights so had to mess with textures, please bear with me...
These wooden belfries are typical to my home county. One could find them in every village in the old days, and there is still a few to be found nowadays too.
The texture I used here is Dol Goldur from Max F. Williams.
A different windmill than two posts earlier in my stream. This one is up off the ground.
Bucharest, Romania.
The Village Museum in Bucharest is one of the first open-air ethnographic museums in the world. opening to the public in 1936. It is an outdoor collection of original buildings showcasing the folk traditions of Romania’s villages and includes churches, farmsteads, houses and windmills from the historic regions of Dobrogea, Moldavia, Oltenia and Transylvania.
The Ole E. Fauske House was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on October 29, 2021, at a local level of significance for its association Ole E. Fauske and its Folk Victorian architectural style.
Built in 1902, the Fauske House serves as an excellent example of a Folk Victorian style of architecture. Elements of the Folk Victorian style that are present include a symmetrical façade, a front porch with gingerbread ornamentation, and a gingerbread cornice.
Ole E. Fauske, a Norwegian immigrant, was an early settler and businessman of Minnehaha County. From his family’s arrival to Minnehaha County, Dakota Territory in c.1873 to his death in 1941, Ole E. Fauske held numerous titles in the area ranging from store merchant, postmaster, investor, landowner, and clerk on the Brandon Township Board. Ole E. Fauske was a vital member to his community in Corson, South Dakota and the surrounding area based on the economic impact he had through his business ventures, civil service, and economic activities.
Historical wooden buildings from many regions of Ukraine brought to the museum and reconstructed.
Church of St Paraskeva from Stoyaniv village. 1820
The Rowe House was added to the National Register in February 2001, photograph from nomination.
The Rowe House is located in Pierre, Hughes County and was built in 1907. This house is one of the earliest built in the neighborhood and sticks out through its unique architecture against the surrounding mostly one-story ranch style houses. The architectural style of this home is the Folk Victorian style, which was prevalent in South Dakota between the period of 1890 and 1910. Folk Victorian architecture is inspired by Italianate and Queen Anne designs with the main area of focus drawn to the porch or cornice which both accents the exterior portions of the building.
Walter Rowe was head of the Capital City Telephone Company and was very influential in bringing telephone and telegraph operations to Fort Pierre. He later connected the two cities of Pierre to Fort Pierre by sending telephone wires across the Missouri River. Telephone poles were strategically placed from the banks of the Missouri, to sandbars that were present across the river and La Framboise Island to allow for the telephone lines to cross the Missouri, above water. Soon after Rowe made it possible for telephone services to be carried out from Pierre to other cities such as Rapid City and Wolsey. These connections allowed centrally located Pierre to contact western and northeastern South Dakota. Rowe purchased the lots for this house in 1904 but sat vacant till 1907 when the house was completed.