His Home Was A Castle - Biltmore House
Biltmore, the opulent 250-room French Renaissance chateau, nestled in North Carolina’s Blue Ridge Mountains, was the vision of George Washington Vanderbilt, carried out by renowned architect Richard Morris Hunt. Construction began in 1889 and the opulent estate, with grounds designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, was opened on Christmas Eve in 1895 to family and friends.
The Home Of A Living Contradiction - Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello
Monticello was the home of Declaration of Independence author, architect, Governor of Virginia, Ambassador to France, U.S. Vice President, two-term President and Founding Father Thomas Jefferson. Jefferson called Monticello his home from 1770 until his death in 1826.
A Ride Through Long Island’s South Fork - Southampton to Montauk
Long stretches of beach, farmland, towns and main streets with century old homes, and estates hidden behind hedges.