top of page
BLOG



The "Haunted" Myrtles Plantation
In the quiet town of St. Francisville, Louisiana, beneath a canopy of moss-draped oaks, sits a house wrapped in legend. Built in 1796, The Myrtles Plantation is graceful on the outside—white columns, deep verandas, hand-carved details. But inside, it carries something deeper. Something unsettled. This isn’t just a historic home—it’s one of the most haunted places in America. The most enduring tale is that of Chloe, an enslaved woman said to have poisoned the family’s children
Angela Knight
Jan 141 min read


The H.P. Sutton House
The H.P. Sutton House isn’t merely a residence—it’s one of Frank Lloyd Wright’s rarest Prairie School designs, and the only Wright home ever built in Nebraska. Commissioned by Eliza Sutton in the early 1900s and completed in 1908, the house still stands as both a functional family home and an enduring work of architectural art. From the outside, the home is all clean lines and low profiles—horizontal planes extending outward like wings, echoing the vast prairie horizon. Wide
Angela Knight
Jan 72 min read


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
FOLLOW OUR STORIES on SOCIAL
bottom of page




