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- Isaqueena abstract "Isaqueena, also known as the Gassaway Mansion, is a historic house in Greenville, South Carolina, and the largest private residence in the Upstate. In 1982 it was listed in the National Register of Historic Places.The 40-room house was built between 1919 and 1924 by Walter L. Gassaway, a banker and textile mill owner; his wife, Minnie Quinn Gassaway, designed the structure after taking a correspondence course in architecture. Mrs. Gassaway used the mansion itself for entertaining, including card parties and \"entertainments in the music room and ballroom\", but she also supervised the 110-acre estate that included a working farm and dairy.As the National Register nomination notes, the three-story house is \"an unusual example of eclecticism\", blending neo-Gothic and neoclassical elements that include six Doric columns, a Palladian window, a castellated tower, two rooftop patios, and a massive porte-cochère. Stone for the random bond masonry was in part taken from a mid-nineteenth-century grist mill on the Reedy River owned by Greenville founder Vardry McBee.Walter Gassaway died of a heart attack on June 4, 1930. The following year his widow abandoned Isaqueena for a smaller home (which she also designed) closer to downtown Greenville. Most of the estate was sold for house lots, and the mansion was converted into rental apartments. In 1959, the building was purchased by the fledgling Greenville Art Museum, which occupied it and built an art school building on the property. After the art museum moved to a purpose-built gallery on Greenville's Heritage Green in 1974, the mansion sat vacant until purchased in 1977 for use as a church and school. The building once again became a private residence in the 1990s and is also used as a wedding venue.".
- Isaqueena added "1982-07-01".
- Isaqueena architecturalStyle Gothic_Revival_architecture.
- Isaqueena architecturalStyle Neoclassical_architecture.
- Isaqueena area "8093.7128448".
- Isaqueena location Greenville,_South_Carolina.
- Isaqueena nrhpReferenceNumber "82003859".
- Isaqueena thumbnail Isaqueena.jpg?width=300.
- Isaqueena wikiPageID "41327064".
- Isaqueena wikiPageLength "4398".
- Isaqueena wikiPageOutDegree "20".
- Isaqueena wikiPageRevisionID "680861792".
- Isaqueena wikiPageWikiLink Battlement.
- Isaqueena wikiPageWikiLink Category:Houses_completed_in_1924.
- Isaqueena wikiPageWikiLink Category:Houses_in_Greenville,_South_Carolina.
- Isaqueena wikiPageWikiLink Category:Houses_on_the_National_Register_of_Historic_Places_in_South_Carolina.
- Isaqueena wikiPageWikiLink Category:National_Register_of_Historic_Places_in_Greenville,_South_Carolina.
- Isaqueena wikiPageWikiLink Doric_order.
- Isaqueena wikiPageWikiLink Gothic_Revival_architecture.
- Isaqueena wikiPageWikiLink Greenville,_South_Carolina.
- Isaqueena wikiPageWikiLink Gristmill.
- Isaqueena wikiPageWikiLink Myocardial_infarction.
- Isaqueena wikiPageWikiLink National_Register_of_Historic_Places.
- Isaqueena wikiPageWikiLink Neoclassical_architecture.
- Isaqueena wikiPageWikiLink Palladian_architecture.
- Isaqueena wikiPageWikiLink Porte-cochère.
- Isaqueena wikiPageWikiLink Reedy_River.
- Isaqueena wikiPageWikiLink Upstate_South_Carolina.
- Isaqueena wikiPageWikiLink Vardry_McBee.
- Isaqueena wikiPageWikiLinkText "Isaqueena".
- Isaqueena yearOfConstruction "1919".
- Isaqueena added "1982-07-01".
- Isaqueena architect "Minnie Quinn Gassaway".
- Isaqueena architecture "Neo-Gothic and neoclassical".
- Isaqueena built "1919".
- Isaqueena caption "Isaqueena , 2013".
- Isaqueena coordDisplay "inline,title".
- Isaqueena governingBody "Private".
- Isaqueena latDegrees "34".
- Isaqueena latDirection "N".
- Isaqueena latMinutes "51".
- Isaqueena latSeconds "44".
- Isaqueena location "106".
- Isaqueena locmapin "South Carolina".
- Isaqueena longDegrees "82".
- Isaqueena longDirection "W".
- Isaqueena longMinutes "22".
- Isaqueena longSeconds "24".
- Isaqueena name "Isaqueena".
- Isaqueena refnum "82003859".
- Isaqueena wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Convert.
- Isaqueena wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_NRHP.
- Isaqueena wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:National_Register_of_Historic_Places_in_South_Carolina.
- Isaqueena wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Isaqueena subject Category:Houses_completed_in_1924.
- Isaqueena subject Category:Houses_in_Greenville,_South_Carolina.
- Isaqueena subject Category:Houses_on_the_National_Register_of_Historic_Places_in_South_Carolina.
- Isaqueena subject Category:National_Register_of_Historic_Places_in_Greenville,_South_Carolina.
- Isaqueena hypernym House.
- Isaqueena point "34.86222222222222 -82.37333333333333".
- Isaqueena type ArchitecturalStructure.
- Isaqueena type Building.
- Isaqueena type Place.
- Isaqueena type Location.
- Isaqueena type Place.
- Isaqueena type Thing.
- Isaqueena type SpatialThing.
- Isaqueena type Q41176.
- Isaqueena comment "Isaqueena, also known as the Gassaway Mansion, is a historic house in Greenville, South Carolina, and the largest private residence in the Upstate. In 1982 it was listed in the National Register of Historic Places.The 40-room house was built between 1919 and 1924 by Walter L. Gassaway, a banker and textile mill owner; his wife, Minnie Quinn Gassaway, designed the structure after taking a correspondence course in architecture. Mrs.".
- Isaqueena label "Isaqueena".
- Isaqueena sameAs Q16892714.
- Isaqueena sameAs m.0zmynwn.
- Isaqueena sameAs Q16892714.
- Isaqueena lat "34.86222222222222".
- Isaqueena long "-82.37333333333333".
- Isaqueena wasDerivedFrom Isaqueena?oldid=680861792.
- Isaqueena depiction Isaqueena.jpg.
- Isaqueena isPrimaryTopicOf Isaqueena.
- Isaqueena name "Isaqueena (Gassaway Mansion)".