Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Clarence_H._Cooke_House> ?p ?o }
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House abstract "The Clarence H. Cooke House, later known as the Marks Estate, at 3860 Old Pali Road, Honolulu, Hawaiʻi, was built for Clarence Hyde Cooke, the second son of Charles Montague Cooke and Anna Rice Cooke, heirs of the Castle & Cooke fortune. It was designed by the architect Hardie Phillip, built in 1929-32, and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986 as a fine example of the upper-class, Hawaiian-style, great mansion of the late 1920s and early 1930s.Phillip first worked in Honolulu as a member of the firm of Bertram Goodhue and Associates of New York, who also designed the Honolulu Museum of Art on the site of the former home of Anna Rice Cooke, the C. Brewer Building downtown, and Lihiwai, the residence of Territorial Governor George R. Carter in Nuʻuanu Valley. For Clarence Cooke, Phillip designed a sprawling 24-room mansion fit for the lavish entertainment it became known for. Features of the evolving Hawaiian Regional style of the era include numerous lanai and open spaces, double-pitched hipped roof (\"Dickey\" roof), and lushly landscaped grounds. The two-story, whitewashed building is constructed of brick on the ground floor and board and batten on the upper floor. A porte cochere topped by an open lanai leads to a formal entry hall with staircase, which provides access to both floors of two wings running in opposite directions. There are also three guest cottages, a gatehouse, and a four-car garage with servants' quarters above, and a swimming pool with dressing rooms at the rear of the property. The pool area was earlier designed in Neoclassical style by Hart Wood.Cooke left the estate to the Academy of Arts, which sold it in 1946 to Elizabeth Marks, the wealthy daughter of Lincoln L. McCandless. Her husband Lester Marks was a land commissioner for the Territory who resigned in 1949 when Governor Ingram M. Stainback decided to build a new Pali Highway up Nuʻuanu Valley, right through the middle of their estate. They sued to block the use of their land for the highway, but in 1956 the Territory finally bought the estate for $624,000. However, the Markses were allowed to live in their old home until 1976, when Mrs. Marks was evicted. By that time, she was a widow, but still wealthy enough to buy a new house at Black Point in Kahala.State government departments then took it over, using it for office space, conferences, and special events. After trying to sell it for years, in 2002 the State finally auctioned off the property, which had been appraised at $4.5 million. The winning bid of $2.5 million came from Unity House Incorporated, a labor union nonprofit organization, which planned to use it for office space and a retiree activity center. In 2006, it was purchased by Douglas Himmelfarb, a Hawaii art and furniture dealer, for $4.41 million. During that time, much of the house was renovated and in 2010 was put up for sale at $9.9 million, then reduced to $8.5 million without finding a buyer. After Himmelfarb experienced financial difficulties, JPMorgan Chase Bank took possession of the property in 2014 for $6.5 million through a foreclosure. As of January 2015, the estate is on the market for $5.6 million.".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House added "1986-08-20".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House architect Mayers_Murray_&_Phillip.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House architecturalStyle Mediterranean_Revival_architecture.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House location Honolulu.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House nrhpReferenceNumber "86001619".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House thumbnail Honolulu-ClarenceHCooke-House.JPG?width=300.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageID "25897494".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageLength "6190".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageOutDegree "49".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageRevisionID "650258459".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Anna_Rice_Cooke.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Architect.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Auction.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Batten.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Bertram_Goodhue.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Brick.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink C._Brewer_Building.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Castle_&_Cooke.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_Oahu.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Category:Houses_completed_in_1932.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Category:Houses_in_Honolulu_County,_Hawaii.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Category:Houses_on_the_National_Register_of_Historic_Places_in_Hawaii.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Changing_room.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Charles_Montague_Cooke.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Charles_William_Dickey.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Clarence_Hyde_Cooke.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Cottage.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Garage_(residential).
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Gatehouse.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink George_R._Carter.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Governor.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Hart_Wood.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Hawaii_Route_61.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Hip_roof.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Honolulu.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Honolulu_Museum_of_Art.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Ingram_Stainback.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink JPMorgan_Chase.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Kāhala,_Hawaii.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Lanai.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Lihiwai.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Lincoln_Loy_McCandless.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Mayers_Murray_&_Phillip.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Mediterranean_Revival_architecture.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink National_Register_of_Historic_Places.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Neoclassical_architecture.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink New_York.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Nonprofit_organization.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Nu‘uanu_Pali.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Porte-cochère.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Roof_pitch.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Stairs.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Swimming_pool.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Territory_of_Hawaii.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Trade_union.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Whitewash.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLink Widow.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageWikiLinkText "Clarence H. Cooke House".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House yearOfConstruction "1932".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House added "1986-08-20".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House architect Mayers_Murray_&_Phillip.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House architecture "Hawaiian Regional Mediterranean Revival".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House area "house 4,741 sq. ft.".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House area "lot 206,518 sq. ft.".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House built "1932".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House caption "View from Old Pali Road".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House governingBody "Private".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House latDegrees "21".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House latDirection "N".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House latMinutes "20".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House latSeconds "53".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House location "3860".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House locmapin "Hawaii".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House longDegrees "157".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House longDirection "W".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House longMinutes "49".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House longSeconds "33".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House name "Clarence H. Cooke House".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House refnum "86001619".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_NRHP.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:National_Register_of_Historic_Places.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Okina.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House subject Category:History_of_Oahu.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House subject Category:Houses_completed_in_1932.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House subject Category:Houses_in_Honolulu_County,_Hawaii.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House subject Category:Houses_on_the_National_Register_of_Historic_Places_in_Hawaii.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House point "21.348055555555554 -157.82583333333332".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House type ArchitecturalStructure.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House type Building.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House type Place.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House type Location.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House type Place.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House type Thing.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House type SpatialThing.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House type Q41176.
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House comment "The Clarence H. Cooke House, later known as the Marks Estate, at 3860 Old Pali Road, Honolulu, Hawaiʻi, was built for Clarence Hyde Cooke, the second son of Charles Montague Cooke and Anna Rice Cooke, heirs of the Castle & Cooke fortune.".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House label "Clarence H. Cooke House".
- Clarence_H._Cooke_House sameAs Q5126550.