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From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When  Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
From an elite girls' school to a medical facility, a chapel, a concert hall and now a two-bedroom/two-bathroom 3,500-square-foot house on the market for more than $1 million, this home has had quite the history! According to the current owners, this Silver Spring home "is the crown jewel of the restored National Park Seminary," which operated as a private girls' school from 1894 to 1942 for the likes of girls with last names like Hershey, Chrysler, Heinz, Kraft and Maytag. When Walter Reed Army Hospital acquired the property in 1942, it became a medical facility for injured soldiers returning from World War II and the Korean War. Eventually the seminary was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and used as a chapel until the late 1980s when it fell into disrepair until the Alexander Company purchased the land in 2003 and decided to turn many of the buildings into luxury homes. Now the is stucco and wood exteriors combined with the 33 extant stained glass windows, abundance of natural light, 33' ceilings and rounded walls give the place a very "Guggenheimish" aesthetic. (Image: Courtesy{ }Houwzer Realty)
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We spent a morning with the Big Apple Circus
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