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  1. Plan Your Visit. Take a tour of this beautiful 10,000 sq.ft. Italianate Victorian family home of President Benjamin Harrison – our country’s 23rd US President (1889-1893) and Indiana’s only President. Built in 1875, the home is beautifully furnished with many of Harrisons paintings, furniture, and other artifacts including political ...

  2. Benjamin Harrison Home in Indianapolis, Indiana. With his increasing reputation, local Republicans urged Harrison to run for Congress. He initially confined his political activities to speaking on behalf of other Republican candidates, a task for which he received high praise from his colleagues.

  3. Visitors will see three floors, ten rooms and a nationally significant collection of over 10,000 artifacts on exhibit. An extraordinary 75-80% are original to the Harrison family. The 1875 Italianate Victorian family home of Benjamin Harrison provides insight into his family’s life and history.

  4. Dec 21, 2019 · Tour of the Benjamin Harrison House. MP3 audio - Standard. Price: $0.99. Request Download. See all on Harrison, Benjamin Indiana American History TV. Benjamin Harrison, who lived his adult life in ...

  5. The Presidency of Benjamin Harrison, Lawrence, Kans., 1987. HISTORIC SITES. Benjamin Harrison Home. 1230 North Delaware Street. Indianapolis, IN 46202 Benjamin Harrison Birthplace / William Henry Harrison Home. Symmes and Washington Avenues. North Bend, OH 45052 Crown Hill Cemetery (Harrison Grave Site). 700 West 38th Street. Indianapolis, IN

  6. The Presidency of Benjamin Harrison, Lawrence, Kans., 1987. HISTORIC SITES. Benjamin Harrison Home. 1230 North Delaware Street. Indianapolis, IN 46202 Benjamin Harrison Birthplace / William Henry Harrison Home. Symmes and Washington Avenues. North Bend, OH 45052 Crown Hill Cemetery (Harrison Grave Site). 700 West 38th Street. Indianapolis, IN

  7. Jan 22, 2004 · Marion County, 1230 N. Delaware Street, Indianapolis. Benjamin Harrison, 23d President of the United States, lived in this house from the 1870's until his death in 1901. In 1854 he had moved from his home State, Ohio, to Indianapolis, the burgeoning capital of Indiana, to pursue a legal career.

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