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・ Walnut Grove, Hardin County, Tennessee
・ Walnut Grove, Indiana
・ Walnut Grove, Kentucky
・ Walnut Grove, Langley
・ Walnut Grove, McDonough County, Illinois
・ Walnut Grove, Minnesota
・ Walnut Grove, Mississippi
・ Walnut Grove, Missouri
・ Walnut Grove, Pope County, Arkansas
・ Walnut Grove, Putnam County, Illinois
・ Walnut Grove, Smith County, Texas
・ Walnut Grove, Sumner County, Tennessee
・ Walnut Grove, Warren County, Indiana
・ Walnut Grove, Washington
・ Walnut Grove, Washington County, Arkansas
Walnut Hall
・ Walnut Heights, California
・ Walnut High School
・ Walnut Hill
・ Walnut Hill (DART station)
・ Walnut Hill (Lynchburg, Virginia)
・ Walnut Hill (Omaha)
・ Walnut Hill (SEPTA station)
・ Walnut Hill / Denton (DART station)
・ Walnut Hill Community Church
・ Walnut Hill Cotton Gin
・ Walnut Hill Elementary School
・ Walnut Hill Historic District
・ Walnut Hill Historic District (Carnesville, Georgia)
・ Walnut Hill Historic District (Knightdale, North Carolina)


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Walnut Hall : ウィキペディア英語版
Walnut Hall

Walnut Hall was a row of four Georgian-style terraced homes in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Constructed in 1856, it was recognized by both the Government of Canada〔(Report to Toronto East York Community Council from Joe Halstead, Commissioner Economic Development, Culture and Tourism, re. 102 – 110 Shuter Street – Walnut Hall – Authority to Enter into an Heritage Easement Agreement (HEA). ) June 5, 2002. Retrieved 2008-04-29.〕 and the City of Toronto〔''A by-law to designate the property at 102-108 Shuter Street as being of architectural value or interest''. City of Toronto By-law No. 1997-0219. Enacted May 12, 1997.〕 as being of historic significance, but portions of it collapsed and it had to be demolished in 2007 due to neglect. At the time of its demolition, it was Toronto's last remaining complete row of 19th century Georgian townhomes.〔Kyonka, Nick. ''Historic building dies of neglect.'' Toronto Star. May 20, 2007.〕
==O'Donohoe Row==
John O'Donohoe, a local politician, auctioneer and land speculator, purchased a lot on Shuter Street in Toronto in 1853. A four-unit terrace, known as ''O'Donohoe Row'', was designed by architect John Tully and completed on the lot in 1856. At three and half storeys, the building featured buff brick with decorative brickwork and stone detailing, a symmetrical façade, a gabled roof and dormer windows.〔
At the time, Shuter Street was located in a prestigious residential neighbourhood. Given its location and the quality of its construction, O'Donohoe Row was intended to cater to the affluent middle class, and was representative of the Georgian-style brick row houses which flourished in Toronto in the 1850s.〔
The character of the neighbourhood changed, and the building was renamed ''Walnut Hall Apartment House'' in 1903.〔 In 1949, the interior was converted to a rooming house, and a number of changes were made to the exterior, including the conversion of the southeast corner to a storefront.〔
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police purchased the building in the 1970s, as part of a land assembly for a new Ontario Division headquarters building.〔Goddard, John. ''Historic Building in Ruins.'' Toronto Star. May 21, 2007.〕 In 1983, the federal government designated it as a Recognized Federal Heritage Building. It was also during the 1980s that Walnut Hall was vacated, left unheated and boarded up.〔〔 The building was sold to a private developer in 1996. Once it was privately owned, the City designated Walnut Hall under the Ontario Heritage Act in 1997.〔

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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