Ar-Qua Springs
Ar-Qua Springs, also known as the Thomas Thornbrough House or the Thomas Thornburgh House was built beginning about 1751 near Arden, West Virginia. The house was built by local Quaker elder Thomas Thornbrough, beginning as a one-room, 1½ story limestone rubble house that was quickly expanded with log additions. The house may have been used as a Quaker meeting house during the 18th century. The property includes a two-level stone springhouse. Ar-Qua Springs was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1976.
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
primaryTopic
Ar-Qua Springs
Ar-Qua Springs, also known as the Thomas Thornbrough House or the Thomas Thornburgh House was built beginning about 1751 near Arden, West Virginia. The house was built by local Quaker elder Thomas Thornbrough, beginning as a one-room, 1½ story limestone rubble house that was quickly expanded with log additions. The house may have been used as a Quaker meeting house during the 18th century. The property includes a two-level stone springhouse. Ar-Qua Springs was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1976.
has abstract
Ar-Qua Springs, also known as ...... er of Historic Places in 1976.
@en
Ar-Qua Springs, auch als Thoma ...... f Historic Places aufgenommen.
@de
nearest city
NRHP Reference Number
Wikipage page ID
23,513,073
page length (characters) of wiki page
Wikipage revision ID
1,014,695,387
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
year of construction
added
1976-12-12
architect
Thornbrough, Thomas
@en
built
locmapin
West Virginia#USA
@en
name
Ar-Qua Springs
@en
nearest city
refnum
76,001,929
wikiPageUsesTemplate
subject
point
39.424166666666665 -78.03833333333333
comment
Ar-Qua Springs, also known as ...... er of Historic Places in 1976.
@en
Ar-Qua Springs, auch als Thoma ...... 8. Jahrhunderts als ein Versam
@de
label
Ar-Qua Springs
@de
Ar-Qua Springs
@en
lat
3.9424166666666665e+1
long
-7.803833333333333e+1
wasDerivedFrom
isPrimaryTopicOf
name
Ar-Qua Springs
@en