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The Historic Bonner-Whitaker-McClendon House, Tyle Poster

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30.48 cm x 20.32 cm
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Paper Type: Value Poster Paper (Semi-Gloss)

Your walls are a reflection of your personality, so let them speak with your favourite quotes, art, or designs printed on our custom Giclée posters! High-quality, microporous resin-coated paper with a beautiful semi-gloss finish. Choose from standard or custom-sized posters and framing options to create art that’s a perfect representation of you.

  • Gallery-quality Giclée prints
  • Ideal for vibrant artwork and photographic reproduction
  • Semi-gloss finish
  • Pigment-based inks for full-colour spectrum high-resolution printing
  • Durable 185gsm paper
  • Available in custom sizing up to 152.4 cm
  • Frames available on all standard sizes
  • Frames include Non-Glare Acrylic Glazing

About This Design

The Historic Bonner-Whitaker-McClendon House, Tyle Poster

The Historic Bonner-Whitaker-McClendon House, Tyle Poster

"The Historic Bonner-Whitaker-McClendon House, Tyler, Texas" by Catherine Sherman. Azaleas surround the Bonner-Whitaker-McClendon House, built in 1878. This beautiful house was designated as a Tyler Historic Landmark in 1984 and is also a Recorded Texas Historic Landmark and on the National Register of Historic Places. Judge M. H. Bonner, a Texas Supreme Court Associate Justice, bought land from the estate of his former law partner, Texas' first governor, J. Pinckney Henderson, and than gave two acres to his oldest daughter Mattie, when she married attorney Harrison Whitaker. The newlyweds built their house in 1878, furnishing it with fireplaces mantles, light fixtures, wallpaper and much of their furniture from a shopping trip to New York. The Whitakers presided over dinners and parties as a centre of Tyler society. After Mattie died, the house was sold to Mattie's younger sister Annie and her husband Sidney McClendon. The McClendons had nine children, the youngest of whom was Sarah, who became a noted Washington, D.C. journalist. Sarah was born in the house in 1910. McClendon graduated from Tyler Junior College in 1928, and from the University of Missouri's School of Journalism in 1931. She worked for newspapers in Texas, then enlisted in the Women's Army Auxililiary Corps, and reported for duty in September, 1942. She was married while in the Army and had a daughter. In June 1944, after McClendon's discharge from the Women's Army Corps, famed newspaperman Bascom N. Timmons hired McClendon as a Washington, D.C. correspondent for the Philadelphia Daily News. In 1946, when Timmons discharged McClendon to make room for reporters returning from service in World War II, McClendon started her own service, the McClendon News Service, which provided Washington dispatches and columns to member newspapers and personal subscribers. After a divorce, now a single mother, McClendon often brought her young daughter to news conferences, where she covered presidential politics for more than half a century. She was a model for women in journalism and as a vocal advocate of various causes, particularly those of United States military veterans. McClendon was known for posing incisive questions at U.S. presidential press conferences. Of the 76 homes or buildings listed in the Tyler Register of Historic Places, only two are available for tours: The Goodman-Le-Grand Home which is owned and operated as the Goodman Museum by the city of Tyler and the McClendon House, which is self-financed and self-sustaining

Customer Reviews

4.8 out of 5 stars rating14.4K Total Reviews
12401 total 5-star reviews1360 total 4-star reviews253 total 3-star reviews145 total 2-star reviews258 total 1-star reviews
14,417 Reviews
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5 out of 5 stars rating
By Jubelen P.27 February 2020Verified Purchase
Print, Size: 76.20cm x 50.80cm, Media: Value Poster Paper (Semi-Gloss)
Zazzle Reviewer Program
my staff loves it , and other branch is asking me where i got this and i give your website to them. maybe you can add up on personalised option, laminated or a frame maybe . great job. but you can add an option if we wanted to have it laminated or frame as add up option
5 out of 5 stars rating
By Timothy G.14 October 2021Verified Purchase
Zazzle Reviewer Program
I hung this in the stairwell of our house, near some other Renoir pictures. My daughter says it looks like she is looking at her when she walks up the stairs. it's called "The Excursionist", she is holding a walking stick. Renoir was an impressionist, I don't think this is an actual person. The finished framed picture arrived and looks better than the online pic - Beautiful!
5 out of 5 stars rating
By Ross Y.31 December 2019Verified Purchase
Print, Size: 48.26cm x 33.02cm, Media: Value Poster Paper (Semi-Gloss)
Zazzle Reviewer Program
Absolutely superb Art Deco poster. The colours are vibrant, sympathetic to the era and perfect for use. I framed it and hung above the entrance to my Art Deco inspired lounge room. Stunning! The print is precise, clear and of an excellent standard. It was cleverly packaged so there wasn’t a blemish or crease. Perfect!

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Product ID: 228443550700895216
Added on 17/4/18, 2:37 pm
Rating: G