Patrick Henry's Red Hill
- Title
- Patrick Henry's Red Hill
Items
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O.E. Howell CottageO.E. Howell Cottage bid documents. This document is part of the Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records (MS1236) collection and relates to the mid-1900s restoration of Patrick Henry's Red Hill.
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Petition for Edmund & Dorothea WinstonDigital reproduction of the Petition for Edmund & Dorothea Winston held as Manuscript 2060 at Jones Memorial Library in Lynchburg, Virginia. The handwritten document is a portion of a petition filed in 1817 by attorneys Leigh & Anthony on behalf of Edmund & Dorothea Winston against the executors of Patrick Henry's estate. Dorothea Dandridge married Patrick Henry in 1777 and survived him. A condition of his 1799 will stipulated that she would forfeit her inheritance upon remarriage. Dorothea married Judge Edmund Winston in 1802. Edmund Winston was Patrick Henry's first cousin and an executor of his estate. Following the Winstons' marriage, a lawsuit was brought against the couple, which delayed probation of Henry's will.
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Stanhope Johnson Office RecordsThe collection of the office records of Stanhope S. JOHNSON, a Lynchburg, Virginia, architect, includes estimate books, certificate files, photographs, reference files (mostly pictures clipped from books and serials), and files about specific projects, e.g., the Allied Arts Building, the Memorial United Methodist Church, buildings for Lynchburg College, and the restoration of Red Hill, the home of Patrick HENRY. Also included is an account book from his farm. Parts of this collection have been digitized, including Boxes 15, 16 and 17 related Johnson's restoration of Patrick Henry's Red Hill Plantation. These items are available on the digital portal under the collection Item Set "Patrick Henry's Red Hill".
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The Stanhope Johnson Office Records (Box 16, Folder 4, all images)Scanned images of papers from the Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records collection (JML Manuscript 1236). These papers are from Folder 4 in Box 16 of the collection and pertain to the restoration of Patrick Henry's Red Hill Plantation and adjacent properties. STANHOPE S. JOHNSON was born 16 February 1881 in Lynchburg, Virginia. He attended the Piedmont Business College in Lynchburg and the Scranton School of Architecture in Pennsylvania, where he received a diploma in 1906. He then attended the deHOULTLIEU School of Architecture in Paris in 1912 and took architectural business courses "in the Atelier of H.C.L. SMITH," of London. JOHNSON also traveled throughout Europe studying types of architecture. In 1910 JOHNSON opened architectural offices in Lynchburg and Danville, Virginia and "specialized in classical and colonial architectural design as applied to churches, schools, hotels and residences in Virginia" and throughout the South. A member of the American Institute of Architects, JOHNSON served on the Virginia State Board for the examination of architects, engineers, and land surveyors. Among his noteworthy accomplishments were the preservation and restoration of the MILLER-CLAYTOR House in Lynchburg, and the restoration of Red Hill, the home of Patrick HENRY. He also designed buildings for Randolph-Macon Woman's College and Lynchburg College. JOHNSON died 11 January 1973 in Lynchburg and was buried in the Spring Hill Cemetery in Lynchburg.
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The Stanhope Johnson Office Records: Red Hill (Box 15, Folder 8)Scanned images of papers from the Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records collection (JML Manuscript 1236). These papers are from Folder 8 in Box 15 of the collection and pertain to the restoration of Patrick Henry's Red Hill Plantation and adjacent properties. See related resources for additional materials. STANHOPE S. JOHNSON was born 16 February 1881 in Lynchburg, Virginia. He attended the Piedmont Business College in Lynchburg and the Scranton School of Architecture in Pennsylvania, where he received a diploma in 1906. He then attended the deHOULTLIEU School of Architecture in Paris in 1912 and took architectural business courses "in the Atelier of H.C.L. SMITH," of London. JOHNSON also traveled throughout Europe studying types of architecture. In 1910 JOHNSON opened architectural offices in Lynchburg and Danville, Virginia and "specialized in classical and colonial architectural design as applied to churches, schools, hotels and residences in Virginia" and throughout the South. A member of the American Institute of Architects, JOHNSON served on the Virginia State Board for the examination of architects, engineers, and land surveyors. Among his noteworthy accomplishments were the preservation and restoration of the MILLER-CLAYTOR House in Lynchburg, and the restoration of Red Hill, the home of Patrick HENRY. He also designed buildings for Randolph-Macon Woman's College and Lynchburg College. JOHNSON died 11 January 1973 in Lynchburg and was buried in the Spring Hill Cemetery in Lynchburg. The Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records were given to Jones Memorial following the architect's death.
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The Stanhope Johnson Office Records: Red Hill (Box 15, Folder 1)Scanned images of papers from the Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records collection (JML Manuscript 1236). These papers are from Folders 1 through 6 in Box 15 of the collection and pertain to the restoration of Patrick Henry's Red Hill Plantation and adjacent properties. See related resources for additional materials. STANHOPE S. JOHNSON was born 16 February 1881 in Lynchburg, Virginia. He attended the Piedmont Business College in Lynchburg and the Scranton School of Architecture in Pennsylvania, where he received a diploma in 1906. He then attended the deHOULTLIEU School of Architecture in Paris in 1912 and took architectural business courses "in the Atelier of H.C.L. SMITH," of London. JOHNSON also traveled throughout Europe studying types of architecture. In 1910 JOHNSON opened architectural offices in Lynchburg and Danville, Virginia and "specialized in classical and colonial architectural design as applied to churches, schools, hotels and residences in Virginia" and throughout the South. A member of the American Institute of Architects, JOHNSON served on the Virginia State Board for the examination of architects, engineers, and land surveyors. Among his noteworthy accomplishments were the preservation and restoration of the MILLER-CLAYTOR House in Lynchburg, and the restoration of Red Hill, the home of Patrick HENRY. He also designed buildings for Randolph-Macon Woman's College and Lynchburg College. JOHNSON died 11 January 1973 in Lynchburg and was buried in the Spring Hill Cemetery in Lynchburg. The Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records were given to Jones Memorial following the architect's death.
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The Stanhope Johnson Office Records: Red Hill (Box 15, Folder 10)Scanned images of papers from the Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records collection (JML Manuscript 1236). These papers are from Folder 10 in Box 15 of the collection and pertain to the restoration of Patrick Henry's Red Hill Plantation and adjacent properties. See related resources for additional materials. STANHOPE S. JOHNSON was born 16 February 1881 in Lynchburg, Virginia. He attended the Piedmont Business College in Lynchburg and the Scranton School of Architecture in Pennsylvania, where he received a diploma in 1906. He then attended the deHOULTLIEU School of Architecture in Paris in 1912 and took architectural business courses "in the Atelier of H.C.L. SMITH," of London. JOHNSON also traveled throughout Europe studying types of architecture. In 1910 JOHNSON opened architectural offices in Lynchburg and Danville, Virginia and "specialized in classical and colonial architectural design as applied to churches, schools, hotels and residences in Virginia" and throughout the South. A member of the American Institute of Architects, JOHNSON served on the Virginia State Board for the examination of architects, engineers, and land surveyors. Among his noteworthy accomplishments were the preservation and restoration of the MILLER-CLAYTOR House in Lynchburg, and the restoration of Red Hill, the home of Patrick HENRY. He also designed buildings for Randolph-Macon Woman's College and Lynchburg College. JOHNSON died 11 January 1973 in Lynchburg and was buried in the Spring Hill Cemetery in Lynchburg. The Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records were given to Jones Memorial following the architect's death.
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The Stanhope Johnson Office Records: Red Hill (Box 15, Folder 2)Scanned images of papers from the Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records collection (JML Manuscript 1236). These papers are from Folders 1 through 6 in Box 15 of the collection and pertain to the restoration of Patrick Henry's Red Hill Plantation and adjacent properties. See related resources for additional materials. STANHOPE S. JOHNSON was born 16 February 1881 in Lynchburg, Virginia. He attended the Piedmont Business College in Lynchburg and the Scranton School of Architecture in Pennsylvania, where he received a diploma in 1906. He then attended the deHOULTLIEU School of Architecture in Paris in 1912 and took architectural business courses "in the Atelier of H.C.L. SMITH," of London. JOHNSON also traveled throughout Europe studying types of architecture. In 1910 JOHNSON opened architectural offices in Lynchburg and Danville, Virginia and "specialized in classical and colonial architectural design as applied to churches, schools, hotels and residences in Virginia" and throughout the South. A member of the American Institute of Architects, JOHNSON served on the Virginia State Board for the examination of architects, engineers, and land surveyors. Among his noteworthy accomplishments were the preservation and restoration of the MILLER-CLAYTOR House in Lynchburg, and the restoration of Red Hill, the home of Patrick HENRY. He also designed buildings for Randolph-Macon Woman's College and Lynchburg College. JOHNSON died 11 January 1973 in Lynchburg and was buried in the Spring Hill Cemetery in Lynchburg. The Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records were given to Jones Memorial following the architect's death.
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The Stanhope Johnson Office Records: Red Hill (Box 15, Folder 3)Scanned images of papers from the Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records collection (JML Manuscript 1236). These papers are from Folders 1 through 6 in Box 15 of the collection and pertain to the restoration of Patrick Henry's Red Hill Plantation and adjacent properties. See related resources for additional materials. STANHOPE S. JOHNSON was born 16 February 1881 in Lynchburg, Virginia. He attended the Piedmont Business College in Lynchburg and the Scranton School of Architecture in Pennsylvania, where he received a diploma in 1906. He then attended the deHOULTLIEU School of Architecture in Paris in 1912 and took architectural business courses "in the Atelier of H.C.L. SMITH," of London. JOHNSON also traveled throughout Europe studying types of architecture. In 1910 JOHNSON opened architectural offices in Lynchburg and Danville, Virginia and "specialized in classical and colonial architectural design as applied to churches, schools, hotels and residences in Virginia" and throughout the South. A member of the American Institute of Architects, JOHNSON served on the Virginia State Board for the examination of architects, engineers, and land surveyors. Among his noteworthy accomplishments were the preservation and restoration of the MILLER-CLAYTOR House in Lynchburg, and the restoration of Red Hill, the home of Patrick HENRY. He also designed buildings for Randolph-Macon Woman's College and Lynchburg College. JOHNSON died 11 January 1973 in Lynchburg and was buried in the Spring Hill Cemetery in Lynchburg. The Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records were given to Jones Memorial following the architect's death.
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The Stanhope Johnson Office Records: Red Hill (Box 15, Folder 4)Scanned images of papers from the Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records collection (JML Manuscript 1236). These papers are from Folder 4 in Box 15 of the collection and pertain to the restoration of Patrick Henry's Red Hill Plantation and adjacent properties. See related resources for additional materials. STANHOPE S. JOHNSON was born 16 February 1881 in Lynchburg, Virginia. He attended the Piedmont Business College in Lynchburg and the Scranton School of Architecture in Pennsylvania, where he received a diploma in 1906. He then attended the deHOULTLIEU School of Architecture in Paris in 1912 and took architectural business courses "in the Atelier of H.C.L. SMITH," of London. JOHNSON also traveled throughout Europe studying types of architecture. In 1910 JOHNSON opened architectural offices in Lynchburg and Danville, Virginia and "specialized in classical and colonial architectural design as applied to churches, schools, hotels and residences in Virginia" and throughout the South. A member of the American Institute of Architects, JOHNSON served on the Virginia State Board for the examination of architects, engineers, and land surveyors. Among his noteworthy accomplishments were the preservation and restoration of the MILLER-CLAYTOR House in Lynchburg, and the restoration of Red Hill, the home of Patrick HENRY. He also designed buildings for Randolph-Macon Woman's College and Lynchburg College. JOHNSON died 11 January 1973 in Lynchburg and was buried in the Spring Hill Cemetery in Lynchburg. The Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records were given to Jones Memorial following the architect's death.
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The Stanhope Johnson Office Records: Red Hill (Box 15, Folder 5)Scanned images of papers from the Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records collection (JML Manuscript 1236). These papers are from Folder 5 in Box 15 of the collection and pertain to the restoration of Patrick Henry's Red Hill Plantation and adjacent properties. See related resources for additional materials. STANHOPE S. JOHNSON was born 16 February 1881 in Lynchburg, Virginia. He attended the Piedmont Business College in Lynchburg and the Scranton School of Architecture in Pennsylvania, where he received a diploma in 1906. He then attended the deHOULTLIEU School of Architecture in Paris in 1912 and took architectural business courses "in the Atelier of H.C.L. SMITH," of London. JOHNSON also traveled throughout Europe studying types of architecture. In 1910 JOHNSON opened architectural offices in Lynchburg and Danville, Virginia and "specialized in classical and colonial architectural design as applied to churches, schools, hotels and residences in Virginia" and throughout the South. A member of the American Institute of Architects, JOHNSON served on the Virginia State Board for the examination of architects, engineers, and land surveyors. Among his noteworthy accomplishments were the preservation and restoration of the MILLER-CLAYTOR House in Lynchburg, and the restoration of Red Hill, the home of Patrick HENRY. He also designed buildings for Randolph-Macon Woman's College and Lynchburg College. JOHNSON died 11 January 1973 in Lynchburg and was buried in the Spring Hill Cemetery in Lynchburg. The Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records were given to Jones Memorial following the architect's death.
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The Stanhope Johnson Office Records: Red Hill (Box 15, Folder 6)Scanned images of papers from the Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records collection (JML Manuscript 1236). These papers are from Folder 6 in Box 15 of the collection and pertain to the restoration of Patrick Henry's Red Hill Plantation and adjacent properties. See related resources for additional materials. STANHOPE S. JOHNSON was born 16 February 1881 in Lynchburg, Virginia. He attended the Piedmont Business College in Lynchburg and the Scranton School of Architecture in Pennsylvania, where he received a diploma in 1906. He then attended the deHOULTLIEU School of Architecture in Paris in 1912 and took architectural business courses "in the Atelier of H.C.L. SMITH," of London. JOHNSON also traveled throughout Europe studying types of architecture. In 1910 JOHNSON opened architectural offices in Lynchburg and Danville, Virginia and "specialized in classical and colonial architectural design as applied to churches, schools, hotels and residences in Virginia" and throughout the South. A member of the American Institute of Architects, JOHNSON served on the Virginia State Board for the examination of architects, engineers, and land surveyors. Among his noteworthy accomplishments were the preservation and restoration of the MILLER-CLAYTOR House in Lynchburg, and the restoration of Red Hill, the home of Patrick HENRY. He also designed buildings for Randolph-Macon Woman's College and Lynchburg College. JOHNSON died 11 January 1973 in Lynchburg and was buried in the Spring Hill Cemetery in Lynchburg. The Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records were given to Jones Memorial following the architect's death.
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The Stanhope Johnson Office Records: Red Hill (Box 15, Folder 7)Scanned images of papers from the Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records collection (JML Manuscript 1236). These papers are from Folder 7 in Box 15 of the collection and pertain to the restoration of Patrick Henry's Red Hill Plantation and adjacent properties. See related resources for additional materials. STANHOPE S. JOHNSON was born 16 February 1881 in Lynchburg, Virginia. He attended the Piedmont Business College in Lynchburg and the Scranton School of Architecture in Pennsylvania, where he received a diploma in 1906. He then attended the deHOULTLIEU School of Architecture in Paris in 1912 and took architectural business courses "in the Atelier of H.C.L. SMITH," of London. JOHNSON also traveled throughout Europe studying types of architecture. In 1910 JOHNSON opened architectural offices in Lynchburg and Danville, Virginia and "specialized in classical and colonial architectural design as applied to churches, schools, hotels and residences in Virginia" and throughout the South. A member of the American Institute of Architects, JOHNSON served on the Virginia State Board for the examination of architects, engineers, and land surveyors. Among his noteworthy accomplishments were the preservation and restoration of the MILLER-CLAYTOR House in Lynchburg, and the restoration of Red Hill, the home of Patrick HENRY. He also designed buildings for Randolph-Macon Woman's College and Lynchburg College. JOHNSON died 11 January 1973 in Lynchburg and was buried in the Spring Hill Cemetery in Lynchburg. The Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records were given to Jones Memorial following the architect's death.
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The Stanhope Johnson Office Records: Red Hill (Box 15, Folder 9)Scanned images of papers from the Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records collection (JML Manuscript 1236). These papers are from Folders 9 in Box 15 of the collection and pertain to the restoration of Patrick Henry's Red Hill Plantation and adjacent properties. See related resources for additional materials. STANHOPE S. JOHNSON was born 16 February 1881 in Lynchburg, Virginia. He attended the Piedmont Business College in Lynchburg and the Scranton School of Architecture in Pennsylvania, where he received a diploma in 1906. He then attended the deHOULTLIEU School of Architecture in Paris in 1912 and took architectural business courses "in the Atelier of H.C.L. SMITH," of London. JOHNSON also traveled throughout Europe studying types of architecture. In 1910 JOHNSON opened architectural offices in Lynchburg and Danville, Virginia and "specialized in classical and colonial architectural design as applied to churches, schools, hotels and residences in Virginia" and throughout the South. A member of the American Institute of Architects, JOHNSON served on the Virginia State Board for the examination of architects, engineers, and land surveyors. Among his noteworthy accomplishments were the preservation and restoration of the MILLER-CLAYTOR House in Lynchburg, and the restoration of Red Hill, the home of Patrick HENRY. He also designed buildings for Randolph-Macon Woman's College and Lynchburg College. JOHNSON died 11 January 1973 in Lynchburg and was buried in the Spring Hill Cemetery in Lynchburg. The Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records were given to Jones Memorial following the architect's death.
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The Stanhope Johnson Office Records: Red Hill (Box 16 Folder 2, Images 1-475)Scanned images of papers from the Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records collection (JML Manuscript 1236). These papers are from Folder 2, Images 1-475, in Box 16 of the collection and pertain to the restoration of Patrick Henry's Red Hill Plantation and adjacent properties. STANHOPE S. JOHNSON was born 16 February 1881 in Lynchburg, Virginia. He attended the Piedmont Business College in Lynchburg and the Scranton School of Architecture in Pennsylvania, where he received a diploma in 1906. He then attended the deHOULTLIEU School of Architecture in Paris in 1912 and took architectural business courses "in the Atelier of H.C.L. SMITH," of London. JOHNSON also traveled throughout Europe studying types of architecture. In 1910 JOHNSON opened architectural offices in Lynchburg and Danville, Virginia and "specialized in classical and colonial architectural design as applied to churches, schools, hotels and residences in Virginia" and throughout the South. A member of the American Institute of Architects, JOHNSON served on the Virginia State Board for the examination of architects, engineers, and land surveyors. Among his noteworthy accomplishments were the preservation and restoration of the MILLER-CLAYTOR House in Lynchburg, and the restoration of Red Hill, the home of Patrick HENRY. He also designed buildings for Randolph-Macon Woman's College and Lynchburg College. JOHNSON died 11 January 1973 in Lynchburg and was buried in the Spring Hill Cemetery in Lynchburg.
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The Stanhope Johnson Office Records: Red Hill (Box 16, Folder 1, all images)Scanned images of papers from the Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records collection (JML Manuscript 1236). These papers are from Folder1 in Box 16 of the collection and pertain to the restoration of Patrick Henry's Red Hill Plantation and adjacent properties. STANHOPE S. JOHNSON was born 16 February 1881 in Lynchburg, Virginia. He attended the Piedmont Business College in Lynchburg and the Scranton School of Architecture in Pennsylvania, where he received a diploma in 1906. He then attended the deHOULTLIEU School of Architecture in Paris in 1912 and took architectural business courses "in the Atelier of H.C.L. SMITH," of London. JOHNSON also traveled throughout Europe studying types of architecture. In 1910 JOHNSON opened architectural offices in Lynchburg and Danville, Virginia and "specialized in classical and colonial architectural design as applied to churches, schools, hotels and residences in Virginia" and throughout the South. A member of the American Institute of Architects, JOHNSON served on the Virginia State Board for the examination of architects, engineers, and land surveyors. Among his noteworthy accomplishments were the preservation and restoration of the MILLER-CLAYTOR House in Lynchburg, and the restoration of Red Hill, the home of Patrick HENRY. He also designed buildings for Randolph-Macon Woman's College and Lynchburg College. JOHNSON died 11 January 1973 in Lynchburg and was buried in the Spring Hill Cemetery in Lynchburg.
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The Stanhope Johnson Office Records: Red Hill (Box 16, Folder 2, Images 475-494)Scanned images of papers from the Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records collection (JML Manuscript 1236). These papers are from Folder 2, Images 475-494, Box 16 of the collection and pertain to the restoration of Patrick Henry's Red Hill Plantation and adjacent properties. STANHOPE S. JOHNSON was born 16 February 1881 in Lynchburg, Virginia. He attended the Piedmont Business College in Lynchburg and the Scranton School of Architecture in Pennsylvania, where he received a diploma in 1906. He then attended the deHOULTLIEU School of Architecture in Paris in 1912 and took architectural business courses "in the Atelier of H.C.L. SMITH," of London. JOHNSON also traveled throughout Europe studying types of architecture. In 1910 JOHNSON opened architectural offices in Lynchburg and Danville, Virginia and "specialized in classical and colonial architectural design as applied to churches, schools, hotels and residences in Virginia" and throughout the South. A member of the American Institute of Architects, JOHNSON served on the Virginia State Board for the examination of architects, engineers, and land surveyors. Among his noteworthy accomplishments were the preservation and restoration of the MILLER-CLAYTOR House in Lynchburg, and the restoration of Red Hill, the home of Patrick HENRY. He also designed buildings for Randolph-Macon Woman's College and Lynchburg College. JOHNSON died 11 January 1973 in Lynchburg and was buried in the Spring Hill Cemetery in Lynchburg.
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The Stanhope Johnson Office Records: Red Hill (Box 16, Folder 3, all images)Scanned images of papers from the Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records collection (JML Manuscript 1236). These papers are from Folder 3, Box 16 of the collection and pertain to the restoration of Patrick Henry's Red Hill Plantation and adjacent properties. STANHOPE S. JOHNSON was born 16 February 1881 in Lynchburg, Virginia. He attended the Piedmont Business College in Lynchburg and the Scranton School of Architecture in Pennsylvania, where he received a diploma in 1906. He then attended the deHOULTLIEU School of Architecture in Paris in 1912 and took architectural business courses "in the Atelier of H.C.L. SMITH," of London. JOHNSON also traveled throughout Europe studying types of architecture. In 1910 JOHNSON opened architectural offices in Lynchburg and Danville, Virginia and "specialized in classical and colonial architectural design as applied to churches, schools, hotels and residences in Virginia" and throughout the South. A member of the American Institute of Architects, JOHNSON served on the Virginia State Board for the examination of architects, engineers, and land surveyors. Among his noteworthy accomplishments were the preservation and restoration of the MILLER-CLAYTOR House in Lynchburg, and the restoration of Red Hill, the home of Patrick HENRY. He also designed buildings for Randolph-Macon Woman's College and Lynchburg College. JOHNSON died 11 January 1973 in Lynchburg and was buried in the Spring Hill Cemetery in Lynchburg.
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The Stanhope Johnson Office Records: Red Hill (Box 16, Folder 5)Scanned images of papers from the Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records collection (JML Manuscript 1236). These papers are from Folder 5 in Box 16 of the collection and pertain to the restoration of Patrick Henry's Red Hill Plantation and adjacent properties. STANHOPE S. JOHNSON was born 16 February 1881 in Lynchburg, Virginia. He attended the Piedmont Business College in Lynchburg and the Scranton School of Architecture in Pennsylvania, where he received a diploma in 1906. He then attended the deHOULTLIEU School of Architecture in Paris in 1912 and took architectural business courses "in the Atelier of H.C.L. SMITH," of London. JOHNSON also traveled throughout Europe studying types of architecture. In 1910 JOHNSON opened architectural offices in Lynchburg and Danville, Virginia and "specialized in classical and colonial architectural design as applied to churches, schools, hotels and residences in Virginia" and throughout the South. A member of the American Institute of Architects, JOHNSON served on the Virginia State Board for the examination of architects, engineers, and land surveyors. Among his noteworthy accomplishments were the preservation and restoration of the MILLER-CLAYTOR House in Lynchburg, and the restoration of Red Hill, the home of Patrick HENRY. He also designed buildings for Randolph-Macon Woman's College and Lynchburg College. JOHNSON died 11 January 1973 in Lynchburg and was buried in the Spring Hill Cemetery in Lynchburg.
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The Stanhope Johnson Office Records: Red Hill (Box 16, Folder 6)Scanned images of papers from the Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records collection (JML Manuscript 1236). These papers are from Folder 6 in Box 16 of the collection and pertain to the restoration of Patrick Henry's Red Hill Plantation and adjacent properties. STANHOPE S. JOHNSON was born 16 February 1881 in Lynchburg, Virginia. He attended the Piedmont Business College in Lynchburg and the Scranton School of Architecture in Pennsylvania, where he received a diploma in 1906. He then attended the deHOULTLIEU School of Architecture in Paris in 1912 and took architectural business courses "in the Atelier of H.C.L. SMITH," of London. JOHNSON also traveled throughout Europe studying types of architecture. In 1910 JOHNSON opened architectural offices in Lynchburg and Danville, Virginia and "specialized in classical and colonial architectural design as applied to churches, schools, hotels and residences in Virginia" and throughout the South. A member of the American Institute of Architects, JOHNSON served on the Virginia State Board for the examination of architects, engineers, and land surveyors. Among his noteworthy accomplishments were the preservation and restoration of the MILLER-CLAYTOR House in Lynchburg, and the restoration of Red Hill, the home of Patrick HENRY. He also designed buildings for Randolph-Macon Woman's College and Lynchburg College. JOHNSON died 11 January 1973 in Lynchburg and was buried in the Spring Hill Cemetery in Lynchburg.
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The Stanhope Johnson Office Records: Red Hill (Box 16, Folder 7)Scanned images of papers from the Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records collection (JML Manuscript 1236). These papers are from Folders 7 in Box 16 of the collection and pertain to the restoration of Patrick Henry's Red Hill Plantation and adjacent properties. STANHOPE S. JOHNSON was born 16 February 1881 in Lynchburg, Virginia. He attended the Piedmont Business College in Lynchburg and the Scranton School of Architecture in Pennsylvania, where he received a diploma in 1906. He then attended the deHOULTLIEU School of Architecture in Paris in 1912 and took architectural business courses "in the Atelier of H.C.L. SMITH," of London. JOHNSON also traveled throughout Europe studying types of architecture. In 1910 JOHNSON opened architectural offices in Lynchburg and Danville, Virginia and "specialized in classical and colonial architectural design as applied to churches, schools, hotels and residences in Virginia" and throughout the South. A member of the American Institute of Architects, JOHNSON served on the Virginia State Board for the examination of architects, engineers, and land surveyors. Among his noteworthy accomplishments were the preservation and restoration of the MILLER-CLAYTOR House in Lynchburg, and the restoration of Red Hill, the home of Patrick HENRY. He also designed buildings for Randolph-Macon Woman's College and Lynchburg College. JOHNSON died 11 January 1973 in Lynchburg and was buried in the Spring Hill Cemetery in Lynchburg.
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The Stanhope Johnson Office Records: Red Hill (Box 16, Folder 8)Scanned images of papers from the Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records collection (JML Manuscript 1236). These papers are from Folder 8 in Box 16 of the collection and pertain to the restoration of Patrick Henry's Red Hill Plantation and adjacent properties. STANHOPE S. JOHNSON was born 16 February 1881 in Lynchburg, Virginia. He attended the Piedmont Business College in Lynchburg and the Scranton School of Architecture in Pennsylvania, where he received a diploma in 1906. He then attended the deHOULTLIEU School of Architecture in Paris in 1912 and took architectural business courses "in the Atelier of H.C.L. SMITH," of London. JOHNSON also traveled throughout Europe studying types of architecture. In 1910 JOHNSON opened architectural offices in Lynchburg and Danville, Virginia and "specialized in classical and colonial architectural design as applied to churches, schools, hotels and residences in Virginia" and throughout the South. A member of the American Institute of Architects, JOHNSON served on the Virginia State Board for the examination of architects, engineers, and land surveyors. Among his noteworthy accomplishments were the preservation and restoration of the MILLER-CLAYTOR House in Lynchburg, and the restoration of Red Hill, the home of Patrick HENRY. He also designed buildings for Randolph-Macon Woman's College and Lynchburg College. JOHNSON died 11 January 1973 in Lynchburg and was buried in the Spring Hill Cemetery in Lynchburg.
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The Stanhope Johnson Office Records: Red Hill (Box 16, Folder 9)Scanned images of papers from the Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records collection (JML Manuscript 1236). These papers are from Folder 9 in Box 16 of the collection and pertain to the restoration of Patrick Henry's Red Hill Plantation and adjacent properties. STANHOPE S. JOHNSON was born 16 February 1881 in Lynchburg, Virginia. He attended the Piedmont Business College in Lynchburg and the Scranton School of Architecture in Pennsylvania, where he received a diploma in 1906. He then attended the deHOULTLIEU School of Architecture in Paris in 1912 and took architectural business courses "in the Atelier of H.C.L. SMITH," of London. JOHNSON also traveled throughout Europe studying types of architecture. In 1910 JOHNSON opened architectural offices in Lynchburg and Danville, Virginia and "specialized in classical and colonial architectural design as applied to churches, schools, hotels and residences in Virginia" and throughout the South. A member of the American Institute of Architects, JOHNSON served on the Virginia State Board for the examination of architects, engineers, and land surveyors. Among his noteworthy accomplishments were the preservation and restoration of the MILLER-CLAYTOR House in Lynchburg, and the restoration of Red Hill, the home of Patrick HENRY. He also designed buildings for Randolph-Macon Woman's College and Lynchburg College. JOHNSON died 11 January 1973 in Lynchburg and was buried in the Spring Hill Cemetery in Lynchburg.
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The Stanhope Johnson Office Records: Red Hill (Box 17, Folder 2)Scanned images of papers from the Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records collection (JML Manuscript 1236). These papers are from Folder 2, Box 17 of the collection and pertain to the restoration of Patrick Henry's Red Hill Plantation and adjacent properties. STANHOPE S. JOHNSON was born 16 February 1881 in Lynchburg, Virginia. He attended the Piedmont Business College in Lynchburg and the Scranton School of Architecture in Pennsylvania, where he received a diploma in 1906. He then attended the deHOULTLIEU School of Architecture in Paris in 1912 and took architectural business courses "in the Atelier of H.C.L. SMITH," of London. JOHNSON also traveled throughout Europe studying types of architecture. In 1910 JOHNSON opened architectural offices in Lynchburg and Danville, Virginia and "specialized in classical and colonial architectural design as applied to churches, schools, hotels and residences in Virginia" and throughout the South. A member of the American Institute of Architects, JOHNSON served on the Virginia State Board for the examination of architects, engineers, and land surveyors. Among his noteworthy accomplishments were the preservation and restoration of the MILLER-CLAYTOR House in Lynchburg, and the restoration of Red Hill, the home of Patrick HENRY. He also designed buildings for Randolph-Macon Woman's College and Lynchburg College. JOHNSON died 11 January 1973 in Lynchburg and was buried in the Spring Hill Cemetery in Lynchburg.
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The Stanhope Johnson Office Records: Red Hill (Box 17, Folder 3)Scanned images of papers from the Stanhope S. Johnson Office Records collection (JML Manuscript 1236). These papers are from Folder 3, Box 17 of the collection and pertain to the restoration of Patrick Henry's Red Hill Plantation and adjacent properties. STANHOPE S. JOHNSON was born 16 February 1881 in Lynchburg, Virginia. He attended the Piedmont Business College in Lynchburg and the Scranton School of Architecture in Pennsylvania, where he received a diploma in 1906. He then attended the deHOULTLIEU School of Architecture in Paris in 1912 and took architectural business courses "in the Atelier of H.C.L. SMITH," of London. JOHNSON also traveled throughout Europe studying types of architecture. In 1910 JOHNSON opened architectural offices in Lynchburg and Danville, Virginia and "specialized in classical and colonial architectural design as applied to churches, schools, hotels and residences in Virginia" and throughout the South. A member of the American Institute of Architects, JOHNSON served on the Virginia State Board for the examination of architects, engineers, and land surveyors. Among his noteworthy accomplishments were the preservation and restoration of the MILLER-CLAYTOR House in Lynchburg, and the restoration of Red Hill, the home of Patrick HENRY. He also designed buildings for Randolph-Macon Woman's College and Lynchburg College. JOHNSON died 11 January 1973 in Lynchburg and was buried in the Spring Hill Cemetery in Lynchburg.
























