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White House (Casa Grande, Arizona)

Buildings and structures in Casa Grande, ArizonaHouses completed in 1929Houses in Pinal County, ArizonaHouses on the National Register of Historic Places in ArizonaNational Register of Historic Places in Pinal County, Arizona
Casa Grande, Arizona 901 N Morrison Ave from NE 1
Casa Grande, Arizona 901 N Morrison Ave from NE 1

The White House in Casa Grande in Pinal County, Arizona is a Tudor Revival house built c. 1929. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.It was noted to be the best example in Casa Grande of a Tudor Period Revival House. It was the home of J.W. White, a long-time resident who had an electrical company in Casa Grande.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article White House (Casa Grande, Arizona) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

White House (Casa Grande, Arizona)
East 9th Street, Casa Grande

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 32.881763888889 ° E -111.74677777778 °
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Address

East 9th Street 570
85122 Casa Grande
Arizona, United States
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Casa Grande, Arizona 901 N Morrison Ave from NE 1
Casa Grande, Arizona 901 N Morrison Ave from NE 1
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Nearby Places

Building at 400 East Third Street
Building at 400 East Third Street

The Building at 400 East Third Street, in Casa Grande, Arizona, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2002. It was built around 1950 in a simplified Romanesque Revival style.The building was commissioned by a local Church of Christ that had been meeting in a grammar school auditorium and was built with hired and volunteer labor; the first services were held on January 3, 1943, though the building was unfinished due to wartime restrictions on building materials. The Church of Christ moved to 805 E. Racine in 1985. After moving out, the building has been home to a succession of churches, with the building being owned by the Church of God of Prophecy (Spanish: Iglesia de Dios de la Profecia, also known as Templo Bethel and later Comunidad Cristiana Bethel). Other users have been Indian Trails Missions, which was authorized to use it as an office to assist immigrants applying for U.S. citizenship) and Living Waters Church, a Pentecostal church.Its 2001 National Register nomination states that it was created as a religious facility, but does not identify the name or the type of religious facility which built it. It further states that at the time of nomination it was in use as a church, again without identifying its name or denomination.It was deemed significant as an example of simplified Romanesque Revival style, and also for its use of brick as construction material. It was the only public building of brick construction in Casa Grande and one of only 13 brick buildings of any type; the others were residences or commercial buildings.