Aktuális sajtó tartalmak és illusztrációs fotók

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ALEXANDRIA, Virginia — The main building at George Washington's River Farm serves as headquarters for the American Horticultural Society on the historic 25-acre property along the Potomac River. The structure incorporates William Clifton's original 1757 colonial brick house with extensive Colonial Revival renovations completed by Malcolm Matheson Sr. during the 1920s, creating what is described as a 1920s estate house with evocative 18th-century-style paneling and period-appropriate architectural details. George Washington acquired this 1,800-acre property in 1760 for £1,210, making it the lar-stock-foto
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ALEXANDRIA, Virginia — The main building at George Washington's River Farm serves as headquarters for the American Horticultural Society on the historic 25-acre property along the Potomac River. The structure incorporates William Clifton's original 1757 colonial brick house with extensive Colonial Revival renovations completed by Malcolm Matheson Sr. during the 1920s, creating what is described as a 1920s estate house with evocative 18th-century-style paneling and period-appropriate architectural details. George Washington acquired this 1,800-acre property in 1760 for £1,210, making it the lar-stock-foto
RF
ALEXANDRIA, Virginia — The main building at George Washington's River Farm serves as headquarters for the American Horticultural Society on the historic 25-acre property along the Potomac River. The structure incorporates William Clifton's original 1757 colonial brick house with extensive Colonial Revival renovations completed by Malcolm Matheson Sr. during the 1920s, creating what is described as a 1920s estate house with evocative 18th-century-style paneling and period-appropriate architectural details. George Washington acquired this 1,800-acre property in 1760 for £1,210, making it the lar-stock-foto
RF
ALEXANDRIA, Virginia — The main building at George Washington's River Farm serves as headquarters for the American Horticultural Society on the historic 25-acre property along the Potomac River. The structure incorporates William Clifton's original 1757 colonial brick house with extensive Colonial Revival renovations completed by Malcolm Matheson Sr. during the 1920s, creating what is described as a 1920s estate house with evocative 18th-century-style paneling and period-appropriate architectural details. George Washington acquired this 1,800-acre property in 1760 for £1,210, making it the lar-stock-foto
RF
ALEXANDRIA, Virginia — The main building at George Washington's River Farm serves as headquarters for the American Horticultural Society on the historic 25-acre property along the Potomac River. The structure incorporates William Clifton's original 1757 colonial brick house with extensive Colonial Revival renovations completed by Malcolm Matheson Sr. during the 1920s, creating what is described as a 1920s estate house with evocative 18th-century-style paneling and period-appropriate architectural details. George Washington acquired this 1,800-acre property in 1760 for £1,210, making it the lar-stock-foto
RF
ALEXANDRIA, Virginia — André Bluemel Meadow overlooks the Potomac River at George Washington's River Farm, the 25-acre historic property that served as the largest of Washington's five farms within his Mount Vernon estate complex. The four-acre meadow contains two large black walnut trees that likely date to Washington's ownership period (1760-1799), when he used the 1,800-acre property as an experimental station for innovative agricultural practices including scientific crop rotation and Potomac River mud fertilization. River Farm, originally known as Piscataway Neck and later renamed Walnut-stock-foto
RF
ALEXANDRIA, Virginia — The main building at George Washington's River Farm serves as headquarters for the American Horticultural Society on the historic 25-acre property along the Potomac River. The structure incorporates William Clifton's original 1757 colonial brick house with extensive Colonial Revival renovations completed by Malcolm Matheson Sr. during the 1920s, creating what is described as a 1920s estate house with evocative 18th-century-style paneling and period-appropriate architectural details. George Washington acquired this 1,800-acre property in 1760 for £1,210, making it the lar-stock-foto
RF
ALEXANDRIA, Virginia — André Bluemel Meadow overlooks the Potomac River at George Washington's River Farm, the 25-acre historic property that served as the largest of Washington's five farms within his Mount Vernon estate complex. The four-acre meadow contains two large black walnut trees that likely date to Washington's ownership period (1760-1799), when he used the 1,800-acre property as an experimental station for innovative agricultural practices including scientific crop rotation and Potomac River mud fertilization. River Farm, originally known as Piscataway Neck and later renamed Walnut-stock-foto
RF
ALEXANDRIA, Virginia — The main building at George Washington's River Farm serves as headquarters for the American Horticultural Society on the historic 25-acre property along the Potomac River. The structure incorporates William Clifton's original 1757 colonial brick house with extensive Colonial Revival renovations completed by Malcolm Matheson Sr. during the 1920s, creating what is described as a 1920s estate house with evocative 18th-century-style paneling and period-appropriate architectural details. George Washington acquired this 1,800-acre property in 1760 for £1,210, making it the lar-stock-foto
RF
ALEXANDRIA, Virginia — The main building at George Washington's River Farm serves as headquarters for the American Horticultural Society on the historic 25-acre property along the Potomac River. The structure incorporates William Clifton's original 1757 colonial brick house with extensive Colonial Revival renovations completed by Malcolm Matheson Sr. during the 1920s, creating what is described as a 1920s estate house with evocative 18th-century-style paneling and period-appropriate architectural details. George Washington acquired this 1,800-acre property in 1760 for £1,210, making it the lar-stock-foto
RF
ALEXANDRIA, Virginia — André Bluemel Meadow overlooks the Potomac River at George Washington's River Farm, the 25-acre historic property that served as the largest of Washington's five farms within his Mount Vernon estate complex. The four-acre meadow contains two large black walnut trees that likely date to Washington's ownership period (1760-1799), when he used the 1,800-acre property as an experimental station for innovative agricultural practices including scientific crop rotation and Potomac River mud fertilization. River Farm, originally known as Piscataway Neck and later renamed Walnut-stock-foto
RF
ALEXANDRIA, Virginia — The main building at George Washington's River Farm serves as headquarters for the American Horticultural Society on the historic 25-acre property along the Potomac River. The structure incorporates William Clifton's original 1757 colonial brick house with extensive Colonial Revival renovations completed by Malcolm Matheson Sr. during the 1920s, creating what is described as a 1920s estate house with evocative 18th-century-style paneling and period-appropriate architectural details. George Washington acquired this 1,800-acre property in 1760 for £1,210, making it the lar-stock-foto
RF
ALEXANDRIA, Virginia — A straight brick-paved walking path with benches on each side leads through the gardens at George Washington's River Farm, the historic 25-acre property that served as the largest of Washington's five farms within his Mount Vernon estate complex. Washington acquired this 1,800-acre tract in 1760 for experimental agriculture, implementing revolutionary seven-year crop rotation systems and innovative fertilizer techniques using Potomac River mud. The American Horticultural Society has operated the property as its national headquarters since 1973, maintaining both the 1757-stock-foto
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ALEXANDRIA, Virginia — The main building at George Washington's River Farm displays Colonial Revival architecture from extensive 1920s renovations by Malcolm Matheson Sr., who grafted a Colonial Revival-style mansion onto William Clifton's original 1757 brick house. Washington acquired this 1,800-acre property in 1760 for £1,210, making it the largest of his five farms and a testing ground for revolutionary agricultural practices including scientific crop rotation and experimental fertilizers. The American Horticultural Society has operated the 25-acre property as its national headquarters sin-stock-foto
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ALEXANDRIA, Virginia — The ballroom at George Washington's River Farm features Colonial Revival-style architecture from the 1920s renovations commissioned by Malcolm Matheson Sr. The estate house, originally constructed by William Clifton in 1757, underwent extensive Colonial Revival transformation during Matheson's ownership from 1919-1971, creating the current mansion that serves as headquarters for the American Horticultural Society. Washington acquired this 1,800-acre property in 1760, making it the largest of his five farms and a testing ground for revolutionary agricultural practices inc-stock-foto
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ALEXANDRIA, Virginia — An alcove with windows overlooks the garden at George Washington's River Farm, headquarters of the American Horticultural Society since 1973. The estate house incorporates William Clifton's original 1757 colonial brick structure with extensive Colonial Revival renovations completed by Malcolm Matheson Sr. during the 1920s, creating evocative 18th-century-style interiors within a transformed architectural framework. Washington acquired this 1,800-acre property in 1760, making it the largest of his five farms and a testing ground for revolutionary agricultural practices in-stock-foto
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ALEXANDRIA, Virginia — The parlor at George Washington's River Farm features Colonial Revival-style paneling and period furnishings installed during Malcolm Matheson Sr.'s extensive 1920s renovations of the historic estate. Matheson acquired the 1,800-acre property in 1919 and spent over two decades transforming the colonial brick house, originally constructed by William Clifton in 1757, into a sophisticated estate that grafted Colonial Revival elements onto the existing 18th-century structure. Washington purchased the property in 1760 for £1,210, making it the largest of his five farms and a-stock-foto
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ALEXANDRIA, Virginia — The main building at George Washington's River Farm serves as headquarters for the American Horticultural Society on the historic 25-acre property along the Potomac River. The structure incorporates William Clifton's original 1757 colonial brick house with extensive Colonial Revival renovations completed by Malcolm Matheson Sr. during the 1920s, creating what is described as a 1920s estate house with evocative 18th-century-style paneling and period-appropriate architectural details. George Washington acquired this 1,800-acre property in 1760 for £1,210, making it the lar-stock-foto
RF
ALEXANDRIA, Virginia — The ballroom at George Washington's River Farm features Colonial Revival-style architecture from the 1920s renovations commissioned by Malcolm Matheson Sr. The estate house, originally constructed by William Clifton in 1757, underwent extensive Colonial Revival transformation during Matheson's ownership from 1919-1971, creating the current mansion that serves as headquarters for the American Horticultural Society. Washington acquired this 1,800-acre property in 1760, making it the largest of his five farms and a testing ground for revolutionary agricultural practices inc-stock-foto
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LORTON, Virginia — George Mason's Gunston Hall, built between 1755-1759 on Mason Neck peninsula along the Potomac River, features the only known coordinated chinoiserie woodwork in colonial America, created under the supervision of English architect William Buckland. The Georgian mansion served as home to George Mason IV (1725-1792), primary author of the Virginia Declaration of Rights that influenced the U.S. Bill of Rights and one of only three delegates who refused to sign the U.S. Constitution due to its lack of individual rights protections. Today, the Commonwealth of Virginia owns the pr-stock-foto
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A presentation copy of Charles Dickens's America travelogue 'American Notes For General Circulation' to George Washington Putnam (1842) who was his personal secretary on that trip, displayed in The Charles Dickens Museum which on this day, is celebrating both its centenary and the 155th anniversary of the great Victorian author's death, on 9th June 2025, in London, England. The Dickens Museum is the only surviving home of Charles Dickens, a repository of 100,00 personal items and research materials relating to the life of this renowned author of famous works such as A Christmas Carol and Great-stock-foto
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Baseball legend Hank Aaron receiving the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President George W. Bush in the East Room of the White House on July 9, 2002. (USA)-stock-foto
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Baseball legend Hank Aaron receiving the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President George W. Bush in the East Room of the White House on July 9, 2002. (USA)-stock-foto
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Washington Old Hall, the ancestral home of the family of George Washington, Washington Village, Washington, Tyne & Wear, England,UK-stock-foto
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Washington Old Hall, the ancestral home of the family of George Washington, Washington Village, Washington, Tyne & Wear, England,UK-stock-foto
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Washington Old Hall, the ancestral home of the family of George Washington, Washington Village, Washington, Tyne & Wear, England,UK-stock-foto
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Weather vane at Mount Vernon Virginia plantation estate of General George Washington-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 03-24-25: Oak Hill is a mansion and plantation located in Aldie, Virginia that was for 22 years a home of Founding Father James Monroe-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 03-24-25: Oak Hill is a mansion and plantation located in Aldie, Virginia that was for 22 years a home of Founding Father James Monroe-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 03-24-25: Oak Hill is a mansion and plantation located in Aldie, Virginia that was for 22 years a home of Founding Father James Monroe-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 03-24-25: Oak Hill is a mansion and plantation located in Aldie, Virginia that was for 22 years a home of Founding Father James Monroe-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 03-24-25: Oak Hill is a mansion and plantation located in Aldie, Virginia that was for 22 years a home of Founding Father James Monroe-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 03-24-25: Oak Hill is a mansion and plantation located in Aldie, Virginia that was for 22 years a home of Founding Father James Monroe-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 03-24-25: Oak Hill is a mansion and plantation located in Aldie, Virginia that was for 22 years a home of Founding Father James Monroe-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 03-24-25: Oak Hill is a mansion and plantation located in Aldie, Virginia that was for 22 years a home of Founding Father James Monroe-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 03-24-25: Oak Hill is a mansion and plantation located in Aldie, Virginia that was for 22 years a home of Founding Father James Monroe-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 03-24-25: Oak Hill is a mansion and plantation located in Aldie, Virginia that was for 22 years a home of Founding Father James Monroe-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 03-24-25: Oak Hill is a mansion and plantation located in Aldie, Virginia that was for 22 years a home of Founding Father James Monroe-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 03-24-25: Oak Hill is a mansion and plantation located in Aldie, Virginia that was for 22 years a home of Founding Father James Monroe-stock-foto
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UNITED STATES - 03-24-25: Oak Hill is a mansion and plantation located in Aldie, Virginia that was for 22 years a home of Founding Father James Monroe-stock-foto