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Covington House (Tallahassee, Florida)

1927 establishments in FloridaBig Bend Region, Florida Registered Historic Place stubsHouses completed in 1927Houses in Tallahassee, FloridaHouses on the National Register of Historic Places in Florida
Leon County, Florida geography stubsNational Register of Historic Places in Tallahassee, FloridaTallahassee, Florida stubsWilliam Augustus Edwards buildings
08 07 08 CovingtonHouseTLH2
08 07 08 CovingtonHouseTLH2

The Covington House (also known as the Schendel House) is a historic house located in Tallahassee, Florida.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Covington House (Tallahassee, Florida) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Covington House (Tallahassee, Florida)
Cortez Street, Tallahassee

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 30.461666666667 ° E -84.275 °
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Address

Cortez Street 328
32303 Tallahassee
Florida, United States
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08 07 08 CovingtonHouseTLH2
08 07 08 CovingtonHouseTLH2
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Nearby Places

The Grove Plantation
The Grove Plantation

The Grove, known officially as the Call/Collins House at The Grove, is an antebellum plantation house located in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. Territorial Governor Richard Keith Call constructed The Grove circa 1840. By 1851, Call deeded the property to his daughter, Ellen Call Long, who owned it until 1903. Long's granddaughter, Reinette Long Hunt, acquired the property and owned it until her death in 1940. Hunt opened The Grove Hotel during this era and developed onsite cottages that served as rental properties. After a brief period under the ownership of John W. Ford and Josephine Agler, future Florida governor LeRoy Collins and his wife, Mary Call Darby Collins, a great-granddaughter of Richard Keith Call, bought The Grove. Mary Call Darby Collins was the last of Call's descendants to own The Grove. During LeRoy Collins' tenure as governor, The Grove served as the unofficial executive residence while the current Florida Governor's Mansion was under construction, from 1955 to 1957. The Collins family owned The Grove until 1985, when the state of Florida acquired the property for the purpose of creating a state historic house museum. The Collins family received life leases and lived there until their deaths. Following the death of Mrs. Collins in 2009, the property formally reverted to the state. The property includes a small active family cemetery that predates the current Grove residence and serves as the final resting place for several generations of the Call and Collins families. It is now a museum.