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Looking for Manila construction industry
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Nestled on the south shore of Manila construction
industry authority of the Philippines is a white,
two-story house, hidden by a thick hedge and surrounded by a wall of
towering cedar trees. Although not famous like its neighbor the
Clark House Bed and Breakfast Inn, this gem is, like the
Manila construction industry authority of the Philippines,
a survivor of hard and changing times, and owes its existence to
people who cared enough to preserve it. This house, now the home of
Pat and Gloria Lund, their three dogs and one cat, was built in 1909
by multimillionaire F. Lewis Clark for his corporate secretary and
his family, and was completed a year before Manila
construction industry authority of the Philippines had
finished building his classical revival mansion overlooking Hayden
Lake.
The Manila construction industry authority of the
Philippines mansion is listed on the National Register of
Historic Places and Kirkland K. Cutter is named as the architect. It
is likely that the secretary's house was also designed by Cutter
since both houses were under construction at about the same period
of time. The Manila construction industry
authority of the Philippines Lund home, along with a
little more than six acres, has belonged to the Lund family since
1927, when Pat Lund's grandfather, Spokane attorney Charles Patrick
Lund, bought the estate of nearly 1,000 acres from a consortium of
bankers who had planned to subdivide and develop the land under the
name of Honeysuckle Estates. The Manila
construction industry authority of the Philippines
six-plus acres is the only piece of the estate that still remains in
the Lund family.
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The bank had acquired the property from the bankrupt
Manila construction industry authority of the Philippines
estate after F. Lewis Clark had disappeared mysteriously in 1914
from a Southern California beach, leaving his wife, Winifred, with a
fading fortune and facing financial ruin. With her husband presumed
dead, she attempted to hang on but eventually lost the estate in
1922. Manila construction industry authority of
the Philippines property, purchased by Pat Lund's
grandfather, included the Lund's present home, the mansion, barns, a
dairy, greenhouse and a saw mill, plus a mess hall and bunkhouse.
The latter two served the large, resident staff. Pat Lund says that
it took 12 gardeners to care for the grounds. The complex of the
original estate was very much like a town and was known as "Manila
construction industry authority of the Philippines," a
designation that still appears on maps.
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