Horchow Hall , also known as the Peletiah Perit House , is a historic building on the campus of Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut , U.S.
4-766: The house was built in 1860 for Pelatiah Perit . It was home to the Yale School of Management until 2013, when the Jackson School of Global Affairs (formerly named the Jackson Institute for Global Affairs) moved into the house. The house was designed by architect Sidney Mason Stone in the Renaissance Revival style , as an Italian villa . It includes a "cupola, elaborate scroll brackets supporting window pediments and single-story front entry portico with paired Corinthian columns sheltering
8-683: A semicircular-arch doorway with rope molding bordering the frame, large room addition on rear." It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places as a contributing property to the Hillhouse Avenue Historic District since September 13, 1985. This article about a building or structure in Connecticut is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Pelatiah Perit Pelatiah Webster Perit (June 23, 1785 – March 8, 1864)
12-773: The class of 1802. He served as president of the Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York from 1853 to 1863, and was a commissioner of police in 1857. He served as president of the Seamen's Savings Bank, and was an original incorporator and director of the Bank of Commerce in New York . Perit was twice married. His first marriage was to Jerusha Lathrop, the sister of his brother-in-law, on September 6, 1809. After her death, he married Maria Coit (1793–1885) on October 8, 1823. Maria
16-588: Was a New York merchant and banker. Perit was born on June 23, 1785, in Norwich, Connecticut and named after his maternal grandfather, Pelatiah Webster . He was the son of Capt. John Perit and Ruth Kellogg (née Webster) Perit. Among his siblings were John Webster Perit (married to Margaretta Dunlap), Maria Perit (wife of Charles Phelps Huntington), and Rebecca Hunt Perit (wife of Joshua Hubbard Lathrop). After his father died in 1795, his mother married Christopher Leffingwell in 1799. He graduated from Yale College with
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