Favorite dog name?
Arson
Barson
Commit Arson
Don’t Come Near Me, Im Going To Commit Arson
Everything Leads To Arson
Farson
seen from Türkiye
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seen from Syria

seen from United States
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from Australia
seen from Armenia
seen from China

seen from Italy
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States

seen from Russia
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seen from United States

seen from France
seen from China
seen from France

seen from United States
Favorite dog name?
Arson
Barson
Commit Arson
Don’t Come Near Me, Im Going To Commit Arson
Everything Leads To Arson
Farson
Pleasant Home, Oak Park IL
Pleasant Home (Farson-Mills House), 1897, 217 Home Avenue, Oak Park, IL 60302
Pleasant Home
George W. Maher designed this 30-room mansion for millionaire banker John W. Farson of Oak Park. Farson purchased the lot at the corner of Pleasant St. and Home Ave. in 1892 for $20,000, the largest price ever paid for a residential lot in Oak Park. Over the following years he acquired land to the south and west for a large garden.
Herbert S. Mills, the second owner of Pleasant Home, made his fortune in the amusement business. The Mills family sold the house in 1939 to the Park District of Oak Park, the grounds being designated as Mills Park in their honor.
The home today is operated as a historic house museum, an events venue, and serves as the headquarters for The Pleasant Home Foundation.
The house is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Illustration of Pleasant Home from The Inland Architect and News Record
Considered one of the earliest examples of prairie school architecture, Pleasant Home is often viewed as the finest surviving example of Maher's residential work. The house was completed three years after Frank Lloyd Wright's Winslow House in River Forest, an early expression of Wright's emerging design principles, later to be known as the prairie style.
The Prairie School developed in sympathy with the ideals and design aesthetics of the Arts and Crafts movement of 19th century England by John Ruskin, William Morris, and others. It is also seen as a successor to the Chicago School of architecture associated with architects William Le Baron Jenney, H.H. Richardson, Daniel H. Burnham, John Wellborn Root, Dankmar Adler, and Louis Sullivan.
The Prairie School attempted to develop an indigenous North American style of architecture, without the design elements and aesthetic vocabulary of earlier styles of European-influenced architecture such as the Queen Anne and Gothic Revival styles.
The smooth surfaces of Roman brick, the low-pitched, hipped roof and the broad entrance porch of the Parson House are characteristic features of Maher's work that link him to the early modern designs of his Prairie School contemporaries. In the Parson House Maher also introduced his personal design philosophy, which he called motif rhythm theory, to unify the decorative details of the house and its furnishings. The house retains its historic integrity in terms of materials, design and setting. Virtually all of the original decoration specified by George Maher is preserved and the lavish decorative treatment is everywhere apparent on the interior.
Kathleen Cummings, National Historic Landmark Nomination, 1996
Detail of front porch support column
Stained glass entrance and flanking windows
Entrance hall fireplace beneath Pleasant Home panel
Detail of lion head carving, repeated throughout the house, on entrance hall built-in bench
Carved screen in entry hall in front of the music room on the mezzanine
Stained glass entrance window
Reception room
Living room or sitting room
Dining room ceiling fixture
Dining room
Dining room corner, leading to summer dining room
Domed light fixture in the library
Library
Original Maher-designed dining table and chairs, now displayed on the second floor
The stunning original wall colors are seen in the above two photos of second-floor bedrooms
Vintage views of Pleasant Home, from the Ryerson and Burnham Libraries, Art Institute of Chicago:
Left: George W. Maher and John W. Farson in the garden of Pleasant Home
Right: Entrance hall
Left: dining room Right: sitting room
The Ryerson and Burnham Libraries, Art Institute of Chicago, house a copy of the 1902 publication "Farson, John, Residence; Farson-Mills Pleasant Home." The publication contains many views of the house, exterior and interior.
Collection Call Number FF Special NA7239.M34 A65 1902.
Access the digitized copy at this link:
US-191, Farson, WY 82932, USA
I don't go here, but this is for those who do.
the trip to Wendimoor has never been this fun
I drew my Wood Elf Ranger for dnd, but I haven’t decided which hair color I want. #doodle #doodlenoodle #dnd #dndcharacter #silionn #farson #silionnfarson #conceptart
The Big Sandy River
The Big Sandy River
The Big Sandy River
Long before the Oregon/California westward migration, animals instinctively stopped at the Big Sandy River during their migration process. With South Pass just 35 miles east, the river was also a natural East-West pathway for man.
The pathway, in combination with the river, made the area a stopping place for Native Americans and later explorers, including the Mountain Men.…
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Las paradojas del management
Las paradojas del management
El management se compone fundamentalmente de relaciones humanas. Y si hay algo que sí se sabe sobre las relaciones humanas es que con frecuencia son ilógicas. El management es una habilidad y, como cualquier otra, es posible aprenderla. En consecuencia, cuanto más se estudien las técnicas de una buena gestión, habrá mejores gerentes.
No necesariamente. Los libros, los seminarios pueden enseñar…
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