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The Governor Ross Mansion
Just beyond the tree line in Seaford, Delaware, where the land stretches wide and quiet, there stands a mansion with stories folded into every brick. The Governor Ross Mansion doesn’t clamor for attention. It doesn’t need to. Its walls have weathered war, politics, and time—and they still hold their shape. Built in 1859, just on the edge of a nation about to tear itself apart, the Ross Mansion was the home of William H. H. Ross, Delaware’s 37th governor and a man whose life s
Angela Knight
Oct 222 min read


The Forest House
In the wooded hills outside Portland, a house rises like something grown rather than built, a structure that seems to belong as much to the forest as the trees themselves. This is the Forest Home by architect Robert Harvey Oshatz, a dwelling where walls bend, ceilings flow, and furniture itself seems to sprout from the ground. Built into a steep slope, the home is often called the “Funnel House” for the way it narrows at the base and then unfurls upward into light-filled livi
Angela Knight
Oct 112 min read


The Flamingo House
On the quiet shores of Lake Michigan in Beverly Shores, Indiana, stands a home that looks like it drifted in from a South Florida postcard. Painted a soft flamingo pink and framed by sharp, geometric lines, the Florida Tropical House feels like both a time capsule and a daydream—a vision of the future imagined nearly a century ago. Originally built in 1933 for the Chicago World’s Fair’s “Homes of Tomorrow” exhibit, this house was never meant to last, let alone be lived in. It
Angela Knight
Oct 12 min read
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