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Woodley and Its Residents, Washington D.C. (Images of America Series) Book

Woodley and Its Residents, Washington D.C. (Images of America Series)
Woodley and Its Residents, Washington D.C. (Images of America Series), In 1801, on a ridge that overlooked the incipient national capital, Philip Barton Key, uncle and mentor of Francis Scott Key, built a Federal-style house and named it Woodley. Its extraordinary vistas, together with its extensive grounds and stables, woul, Woodley and Its Residents, Washington D.C. (Images of America Series) has a rating of 5 stars
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Woodley and Its Residents, Washington D.C. (Images of America Series), In 1801, on a ridge that overlooked the incipient national capital, Philip Barton Key, uncle and mentor of Francis Scott Key, built a Federal-style house and named it Woodley. Its extraordinary vistas, together with its extensive grounds and stables, woul, Woodley and Its Residents, Washington D.C. (Images of America Series)
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  • Woodley and Its Residents, Washington D.C. (Images of America Series)
  • Written by author Al Kilborne
  • Published by Arcadia Publishing SC, November 2008
  • In 1801, on a ridge that overlooked the incipient national capital, Philip Barton Key, uncle and mentor of Francis Scott Key, built a Federal-style house and named it Woodley. Its extraordinary vistas, together with its extensive grounds and stables, woul
  • In 1801, on a ridge that overlooked the incipient national capital, Philip Barton Key, uncle and mentor of Francis Scott Key, built a Federal-style house and named it Woodley. Its extraordinary vistas, together with its extensive grounds and stables, woul
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Book Categories

Authors

Acknowledgments 6

Foreword Walter Isaacson 7

1 Before Woodley 9

2 The Key Years 15

3 The Presidential Years 37

4 Woodley in the 20th Century 75

Epilogue 121

Bibliography 124

Index 126


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Woodley and Its Residents, Washington D.C. (Images of America Series), In 1801, on a ridge that overlooked the incipient national capital, Philip Barton Key, uncle and mentor of Francis Scott Key, built a Federal-style house and named it Woodley. Its extraordinary vistas, together with its extensive grounds and stables, woul, Woodley and Its Residents, Washington D.C. (Images of America Series)

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Woodley and Its Residents, Washington D.C. (Images of America Series), In 1801, on a ridge that overlooked the incipient national capital, Philip Barton Key, uncle and mentor of Francis Scott Key, built a Federal-style house and named it Woodley. Its extraordinary vistas, together with its extensive grounds and stables, woul, Woodley and Its Residents, Washington D.C. (Images of America Series)

Woodley and Its Residents, Washington D.C. (Images of America Series)

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Woodley and Its Residents, Washington D.C. (Images of America Series), In 1801, on a ridge that overlooked the incipient national capital, Philip Barton Key, uncle and mentor of Francis Scott Key, built a Federal-style house and named it Woodley. Its extraordinary vistas, together with its extensive grounds and stables, woul, Woodley and Its Residents, Washington D.C. (Images of America Series)

Woodley and Its Residents, Washington D.C. (Images of America Series)

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