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・ Elizabeth Ryves
・ Elizabeth S. Allman
・ Elizabeth Phillips
・ Elizabeth Phillips Hughes
・ Elizabeth Philp
・ Elizabeth Philpot
・ Elizabeth Pickett
・ Elizabeth Pickett (judge)
・ Elizabeth Pickett Chevalier
・ Elizabeth Pier
・ Elizabeth Pierrepont, Duchess of Kingston-upon-Hull
・ Elizabeth Pipe Wolferstan
・ Elizabeth Piper Ensley
・ Elizabeth Pisani
・ Elizabeth Pitcairn
Elizabeth Place
・ Elizabeth Plantagenet
・ Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk
・ Elizabeth Platz
・ Elizabeth Plunkett
・ Elizabeth Plunkett, Countess of Fingall
・ Elizabeth Poblete
・ Elizabeth Pohlmann House
・ Elizabeth Poirier
・ Elizabeth Polack
・ Elizabeth Polly
・ Elizabeth Polunin
・ Elizabeth Polwheele
・ Elizabeth Poole
・ Elizabeth Porter


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Elizabeth Place : ウィキペディア英語版
Elizabeth Place

Elizabeth Place, or the Henry Bond Fargo House, is a historic residence in Geneva, Illinois in the Mission Revival style. The house was owned by Henry Bond Fargo, a prominent local businessmen who brought several early industries to Geneva. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2008.
==History==
Henry Bond Fargo was born in 1843 in Warsaw, New York. Fargo was the fourth cousin, once removed of William George Fargo, one of the founders of Wells Fargo and Company. Fargo began to work in real estate in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin. He was successful in these endeavors, and E. A. Cummings and Co., the largest real estate business in Chicago, Illinois, offered him a position as a principal salesman, which he accepted. He moved to the far suburb of Geneva in 1887 to continue his career.〔http://gis.hpa.state.il.us/pdfs/164668.pdf〕
Fargo ordered the construction of a new house in 1898 just west of the Fox River. It took two years to complete the house; in the meantime, Fargo's wife Annie Elizabeth Fargo died in 1899. In her honor, he named the new dwelling Elizabeth Place. Fargo was elected Geneva's mayor in 1903 and served for a full year; he was later re-elected mayor from 1907 to 1910. Two years later, he was elected to the Illinois House of Representatives and served a two-year term. In 1919, he petitioned Geneva to rename the street of his residence Elizabeth Place to match the house's name. Henry Bond Fargo was a lifelong Freemason, and offered his home to the Masons upon his death in 1932. However, his descendants stuck a deal with the Masons to instead donate a separate property at State and Second Streets, and the house remained in the family. The residence and coach house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on May 12, 2008.〔

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