Changes

Jump to: navigation, search

Snowden-Gray House

352 bytes added, 13:31, 19 August 2016
Visit
==History==
The home was built in 1852–1854 by Philip T. Snowden and his wife Abigail. He, a successful dry goods merchant and she, a successful milliner (hat-maker). From 1862–1864 it was the home of Civil War Governor David Tod. From the end of the Civil War until 1922, the family of Columbus philanthropist David S. Gray occupied the residence. Since 1922 it has served a variety of uses, including the headquarters of the Columbus Women’s Club. In Between 1950 and 1951 Kappa Kappa Gamma Fraternity acquired the house as its national headquarters. After the house sustained extensive damage from fire in 1965, Kappa Kappa Gamma rebuilt and strengthened the organization's commitment to the Town-Franklin neighborhood and to historic preservation. In 1981 the original downstairs rooms were restored to their 19th century style. Period furnishings and artifacts depict daily life and culture in the Victorian era with an emphasis on the lives and roles of women.
[[File:May7_2010_reduced.jpg]]
==Visit==
Address: 530 East Town Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215
Phone: 614-228-6515, 1-866-KKG-1870
Email: [mailto:foundation@kkg.org foundation@kkg.org] Open for walk-in tours on Wednesdays and Thursdays from 1:00—400p.m. — 4:00p.m.; other times by appointment
Suggested donations: $5/adults, $3/seniors, $3/students, FREE/Children under 5
 
[http://www.snowdengrayhouse.org Snowden-Gray House website]

Navigation menu