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・ Thomas Noel Hill
・ Thomas N. Graham
・ Thomas N. Hart
・ Thomas N. Hastings
・ Thomas N. Heffron
・ Thomas N. Hibbard
・ Thomas N. McCarter
・ Thomas N. Morahan
・ Thomas N. Sato
・ Thomas N. Schroth
・ Thomas N. Scortia
・ Thomas N. Soffron
・ Thomas N. Stilwell
・ Thomas N. Taylor
・ Thomas N. Taylor House
Thomas N. Wheeler Farm
・ Thomas N.E. Greville
・ Thomas Nabbes
・ Thomas Nadauld Brushfield
・ Thomas Nagel
・ Thomas Naghten Fitzgerald
・ Thomas Nagle
・ Thomas Naglieri
・ Thomas Nairne
・ Thomas Naogeorgus
・ Thomas Napier
・ Thomas Napier (British Army officer)
・ Thomas Napier (philanthropist)
・ Thomas Napier Thomson
・ Thomas Nash


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Thomas N. Wheeler Farm : ウィキペディア英語版
Thomas N. Wheeler Farm

The Thomas N. Wheeler Farm is located on Indian Lake Road (Dutchess County Route 61) in the Town of North East, New York, United States, south of the village of Millerton. It is a frame house built at the beginning of the 19th century in the Federal style.
It is one of the earliest surviving intact farmsteads in the Coleman Station Historic District. In 1993, when the district was listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the house and another building on the property were recognized as contributing properties to its historic character. Seven years later it was listed on the Register in its own right.
==Buildings and grounds==

The farm's are located on both sides of Indian Lake Road just west of the three-way intersection where it turns to the east and Mill Road continues north, just west of the former New York Central Railroad right-of-way that is now the Harlem Valley Rail Trail. The area is level, save for a small rise on the northern lot line, located near the floor of the small bowl that makes up the Coleman Station area. A small tributary of Webutuck Creek flows through north end of the property, draining into the creek itself a short distance to the east.〔
North of the road is the house and most of the associated farm buildings are located on the north side of the road. On the south a tennis court stands on what was once a cornfield. Various farm buildings such as a granary, stables and carriage house are located behind the main house. There are six contributing resources to the Register listing on the property.〔
The main block of the house is a two-story, five-bay hand-hewn timber frame building on a stone foundation. It is sided in clapboard and topped with a gabled roof shingled in wood and pierced by two brick chimneys. It has a one-and-a-half-story wing on the east, similarly treated but with two large gabled dormer windows piercing the roof instead of chimneys. Connected to its northeast is a one-story shed-roofed kitchen wing.〔
A gable-roofed single-bay porch with railings and square pillars shelters the main entrance. The first-story windows on the south (front) facade have panels beneath. All windows on that facade of the main block are two-over-two double-hung sash. On the wing they are 12-over-12. The kitchen wing's roof shelters a side entrance and porch on the east end of that wing. Above it is a small Palladian window in the gable field. The north (rear) facade has irregularly placed nine-over-six sash.〔
The raised-panel oak main entrance door, with windows on the side and above, opens onto a wide central hallway with its original heavy oak wide tongue and groove flooring and plaster walls. On the east are two parlors of roughly the same size with some original wall sections and wideboard pine flooring. Their fireplaces are almost identical, with pine mantels and marble hearths; the southeast one having a built-in cupboard nearby. The substantial chimney stacks are angled to be centered at the roof. The kitchen wing's interiors date to the early-to-mid-20th century.〔
On the east of the main hall is the stairs, much of which are original. It has square newels and a simple molded handrail with simple square balusters. The original pine stair treads were protected by carpeting for many years.〔
The second story has an identical floor plan. The northeast bedroom has original wainscoting and chair rail. All woodwork in it and the southeast room is original as is the pine wideboard flooring. The basement runs under the entire house, including the kitchen wing. There are no hearths, but the stone and wood bases of the chimney stacks are evident.〔

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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