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Titanic Survivor's House
Built in 1899, the estate known as Waialua  was never meant to be ordinary. It was built by Richard Beckwith, a man whose life was shaped by the impossible. He boarded the Titanic in 1912—and lived to tell the tale. After the ocean let him go, the mountains called him back. He returned to New Hampshire and poured his energy into the lakefront escape that had long been his sanctuary. What stands there today is one of the last great turn-of-the-century summer homes in New Engl
Angela Knight
Dec 17, 20242 min read
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The Yurt House
Tucked beneath the emerald canopy of a Big Island rainforest, this home began not as a structure, but as a long-held dream. Years ago, two stewards of the land—deeply inspired by permaculture, Hawaiian ecology, and the spirit of off-grid living—set out to create something different. Not a house to stand apart from nature, but one to exist in harmony with it. This is not a typical home. It’s a sanctuary—hand-built, solar-powered, and guided by principles of sustainability and
Angela Knight
Dec 10, 20242 min read
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The White Church Home
Tucked into the historic North End of Boise, at the corner of 18th and Eastman, stands a structure with soul: once a church, now a one-of-a-kind home. Known for generations as The White Church , it carries more than a century of stories in its walls—stories of worship, resilience, reinvention, and community. Originally built in 1911 for the United Presbyterian Church, the building once welcomed congregants through its plain wooden doors and into a sanctuary awash with golden
Angela Knight
Dec 3, 20242 min read
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