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Frank G. Ray House & Carriage House

Buildings and structures in Benton County, IowaCarriage houses on the National Register of Historic PlacesHouses completed in 1890Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in IowaIowa building and structure stubs
National Register of Historic Places in Benton County, IowaQueen Anne architecture in IowaSoutheast Iowa Registered Historic Place stubsVinton, Iowa
The Frank G. Gray House
The Frank G. Gray House

The Frank G. Ray House & Carriage House, also known as Ray Towers, is a historic residence located in Vinton, Iowa, United States. Ray was a local businessman who was associated with the Iowa Canning Company, the largest corporation in Benton County and a major employer in the region. His 2½-story frame Queen Anne house features a complex composition that includes a wraparound front porch, three decorative chimneys, a three-story round tower, porte-cochère, and small porches at various places on all stories. The carriage house features decorative shingles and an irregular roofline that is capped with a cupola and weather vane. They were listed together on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Frank G. Ray House & Carriage House (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Frank G. Ray House & Carriage House
East 10th Street,

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Latitude Longitude
N 42.162222222222 ° E -92.023888888889 °
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Address

East 10th Street 127
52349
Iowa, United States
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The Frank G. Gray House
The Frank G. Gray House
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Iowa Braille and Sight Saving School
Iowa Braille and Sight Saving School

Iowa Braille and Sight Saving School was a state-operated school for the blind. It was replaced by the Iowa Educational Services for the Blind and Visually Impaired. Vinton, Iowa, hosted the school and continued as host of the state agency that replaced it until 2020. Students from all over Iowa were housed and educated at the school. During its existence, students in special education were entitled to educational programming until age 21. Students could attend the school for short-term enrollment for specialized skill development and training. Students attended classes that met individual educational needs. Some students attended select classes at the local public school. Instruction was provided in specialized areas of core curriculum for students with visual impairments, which include compensatory skills, orientation and mobility, social interaction skills, independent living skills, career education/work experience, use of assistive/adaptive technology and visual efficiency skills. The school opened in 1852 as the Iowa College for the Blind. Mary Ingalls, sister of Laura Ingalls Wilder (author of the Little House on the Prairie series), attended the school, graduating in 1889. Her stay was typical for blind students of that era.As of fall 2011, IBSSS no longer had a residential component. Instead, all school-age visually impaired children in Iowa received specialized instruction in their local school districts from professionals employed by the agency, whose administrative offices were located in the old school building in Vinton.