Description of Photograph
This is an 8x12 inch Reproduction Photograph made from a high quality scan of the original. When evaluating the quality of the photo, please keep in mind that most photos in our collection were taken over 100 years ago.
'The Causeway,' James Parmelee house, 3100 Macomb Street, Washington, D.C. Walkway
Title: ['The Causeway,' James Parmelee house, 3100 Macomb Street, Washington, D.C. Walkway]
Creator(s): Johnston, Frances Benjamin, 1864-1952, photographer
Date Created/Published: [1919]
Notes:
Site History. House Architecture: Charles Adams Platt, 1912. Landscape: Charles Adams Platt, overall plan, 1912 and Ellen Biddle Shipman, 1913. Associated Name: Alice Maury (Mrs. James) Parmelee. Today: House privately owned; woodland garden, added in 1927, open to the public as 'Tregaron.'
Title, date, and subject information provided by Sam Watters, 2011.
Forms part of: Garden and historic house lecture series in the Frances Benjamin Johnston Collection (Library of Congress).
Condition caution: unmounted slide.
Subjects:
Gardens--Washington (D.C.)--1910-1920.
Walkways--Washington (D.C.)--1910-1920.
--1910-1920.
Bookmark /2008680110/
Bookmark:2008680110
Bookmark:2008680110

Size
Approximately 8x12 inches.
Note:  Some images may have white bars on the sides or top if the original image does not conform to the 8x12 dimensions.

Want to purchase the Original?
The original is not for sale.

Return Policy
We are so confident in the quality we provide that we back every order with a money-back guarantee! This means if you are not satisfied, for ANY reason, a refund will be given.(No need to return the photo)

Quality
This Photograph is a Archive Quality Reproduction created directly from the original photograph. Our laboratory uses premium DNP Dye-Sublimation Paper guaranteeing brighter colors, sharper whites, and prints that will last a lifetime.

Shipping
We have taken extra steps to ensure that your prints arrive to you safely and undamaged. We use extra thick, stay-flat envelopes to get your photos to you as quickly and as safely as possible.

Source: Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.