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・ Sergeant (band)
・ Sergeant (disambiguation)
・ Sergeant (surname)
・ Sergeant (Sweden and Finland)
・ Sergeant Adjetey
・ Sergeant at Arms of the United States House of Representatives
・ Sergeant at Arms of the United States Senate
・ Sergeant Benton
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・ Sergeant Bluff, Iowa
・ Sergeant Bluff-Luton School District
・ Sergeant Borck
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Sergeant Clark House
・ Sergeant Cork
・ Sergeant Deadhead
・ Sergeant Eric L. Coggins Award
・ Sergeant first class
・ Sergeant Floyd (towboat)
・ Sergeant Floyd Monument
・ Sergeant Getulio
・ Sergeant Hassan
・ Sergeant Hathaway
・ Sergeant John F. Baker, Jr. Bridge
・ Sergeant Kirk
・ Sergeant Lacey
・ Sergeant Lamb novels
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Sergeant Clark House : ウィキペディア英語版
Sergeant Clark House

The Sergeant Clark House built in 1892 is a Vernacular style farmhouse located in Ebey's Landing National Historical Reserve in Coupeville on Whidbey Island, Washington. The Queen Anne StyleEastlake Movement architecture represents application of structural detail and ornamentation, and an early period of community growth.
The house is situated on a land parcel in and a part of the Thomas Coupe Donation Claim, in the Central Whidbey Island Historic District. Through continuous restoration, it has retained its integrity of design, materials, and workmanship.
==History==
Thomas N. Richards was born in Devonshire England in 1847 and settled in Washington in 1869. He was likely a farmer and dairyman. According to Snohomish County records, he married Ruby Burce (born in Maine) in Seattle December 18, 1880. Ruby was the daughter of John Burce, an American Civil War veteran who died during the war, and Ada a resident of Whatcom County. Thomas and Ruby had sixteen children. Thomas Richards built the Sergeant Clark House in 1892. He died in 1899.〔( Snohomish Historic Biographies )〕
It was bought in 1908 by Sergeant Thomas Clark, a soldier stationed at nearby Fort Casey. Clark retired from the service and lived in the house until his death in 1930. “... Jo De Vries' ... grandfather, first ordnance sergeant Thomas Clark, a career Army man, was posted to Fort Casey around 1900. Her father, who was also named Thomas Clark, worked at the fort as a civilian engineer, under the first chief engineer, Mr. O.W. Degan. I was born in what was the old post office, up on the hill, De Vries recalls. At that time, the fort was bustling with 1,000 men. There was a hospital, a bakery, a bandstand, a tailor's shop, the post exchange, a blacksmith shop, and a jail, De Vries said. It was a lovely place. It makes her sad to think of the many old military buildings that have been torn down. De Vries remembers the huge noise made by the big guns. They shook the earth pretty good!”〔(Fort Casey turns 100; pnwlocalnews.com, Sound Publishing Inc.; Jun 07 2000 )〕
Until 1941, the house was occupied by members of the Clark family, some of whom achieved important positions in county government. A son was a county engineer and a grandson, the county sheriff. In 1947 ownership of the house passed to Fred Burchell, who lived in one of the rooms on the lower floor until his death in 1969. The house sat vacant for ten years after Fred Burchell died and was deteriorating rapidly from neglect and vandalism. The previous owners, operators of a dairy farm, did not desire to restore the house or to sell to somebody who would. They agreed, however, to sell the house for removal from their land. Leonard and Linda Madsen purchased it in 1979 with the stipulation that the house would be moved to a new location. The new owners bought it under these conditions and moved it to its new site in July 1979, in the Central Whidbey Island Historic District on S. Main Street in Coupeville. The Madsen's completed restoration to the house in the mid 1980s.


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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