A home in Miami that has been in the same family for more than a century now is ready to capture, holding a price of $ 2.75 million and a subsequent legacy for civil rights movement.
Historical settlement in 752 NW Seventh Street RD, located in the spring line of tree line, has been passed through generations since Ruth Greenfield’s grandparents bought it in 1923 from the general postmaster for Miami at the time, according to one press.
Built in 1916, the two-storey house of arts and style crafts was the home of Greenfield, an attractive musician and activist who broke the racial barriers in 1951 by establishing the Miami-first Miami Arts Conservatory of integrated racial arts to the south.
Decades before Miami’s public schools, Greenfield, was teaching students with all the backgrounds in the disciplines of music, drama, dance and visual arts.
Now, two years after her death in 2023, her children have decided that it is time to give up the family treasure.
“Time for someone to put new energy into her,” her son, Timothy Greenfield-Sanders told Miami Herald, who was the first to report on the rankings.
He noted that the house was always colliding with creativity.
“The house was always full of painters, musicians, dancers,” he said, adding that his mother would like the other owner to “bring the arts home”.
The 2,958 square meter house offers five bedrooms, 3.5 bathrooms and a dust room, sitting in a slightly larger part than most in the area.
Her pricing exceeds a comparable sale of recent neighborhoods, but her family feels that the historical importance of property and charm shared it.
“This is a rare, generating option to restore a historical treasure,” the list notes.
A 3,108 -square -foot house was sold for $ 2.35 million last fall.
Located only 10 minutes from the center of Miami, Spring Garden became a historic circle designated in 1997, thanks to houses like this.
Jackson Keddell by Douglas Elliman holds the list.
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Image Source : nypost.com