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  1. The Michigan Governor's Summer Residence on Mackinac Island is a three-story structure located on a bluff overlooking the Straits of Mackinac. It was originally built as a private residence for Chicago attorney Lawrence Andrew Young.

  2. One of the better known Marshall dwellings with Greek Revival influences is the Governor's Mansion. This mansion was built in 1839, in anticipation that Marshall would become the State Capitol of Michigan.

    • PO Box 143, Marshall, 49068-0143, MI
    • (269) 781-5260
  3. Former home of Michigan governor Fred Warner (1905-1911). Filled with historic artifacts, memorabilia from 1850 through 1920. The mansion sits on approximately three acres surrounding gardens. Museum is open March to December, Wednesdays and the first Sunday of each month 1-5pm.

    • 33805 Grand River Avenue, Farmington, 48335
    • (248) 474-5500
  4. It was built by James Wright Gordon (1809–1853), an attorney and a state senator who promoted the designation of Marshall as the state capital in the first decade of statehood. Despite the lost hopes and optimism, the “Governor's Mansion” retains the simple dignity of a house in a frontier city that once aspired to greatness.

  5. Howard and Letha Sober House. 1959, Wallace Frost; 2004–2005 renovation; 2004–2005 landscape redesign, Robert Schutzki and Michael Southgate. 2520 Oxford Rd. ☰ SEE METADATA. The Sober house expresses the values of upper-middle-class Americans in the 1950s.