Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q21016222> ?p ?o }
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- Q21016222 subject Q8525617.
- Q21016222 abstract "The St. Johannes Rectory is a historic two-story home in the Ansonborough neighborhood of Charleston, South Carolina. The house was built about 1846 by Joel Smith, a planter from Abbeville, South Carolina. The house follows a side-hall plan with two large rooms on the first floor, both of which open onto the piazzas on the west, and a main staircase and hallway along the east side.Mrs. Lydia Bryan owned a house at 50 Hasell Street, but it was destroyed in the Ansonborough fire of 1838. She conveyed the lot to her son, John Bryan, in 1841. After other owners, the empty lot was sold to Smith in 1846. He built the house. On January 26, 1920, the house was bought by St. Johannes Lutheran Church for use as its rectory.".
- Q21016222 thumbnail 52_Hasell.JPG?width=300.
- Q21016222 wikiPageWikiLink Q20708408.
- Q21016222 wikiPageWikiLink Q47716.
- Q21016222 wikiPageWikiLink Q8525617.
- Q21016222 point "32.78325 -79.93013888888889".
- Q21016222 type SpatialThing.
- Q21016222 comment "The St. Johannes Rectory is a historic two-story home in the Ansonborough neighborhood of Charleston, South Carolina. The house was built about 1846 by Joel Smith, a planter from Abbeville, South Carolina. The house follows a side-hall plan with two large rooms on the first floor, both of which open onto the piazzas on the west, and a main staircase and hallway along the east side.Mrs. Lydia Bryan owned a house at 50 Hasell Street, but it was destroyed in the Ansonborough fire of 1838.".
- Q21016222 label "St. Johannes Rectory".
- Q21016222 lat "32.78325".
- Q21016222 long "-79.93013888888889".
- Q21016222 depiction 52_Hasell.JPG.