O'Neill House Office Building (1947) - meaning and definition. What is O'Neill House Office Building (1947)
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What (who) is O'Neill House Office Building (1947) - definition

DEMOLISHED WASHINGTON, D.C. HOTEL AND CONGRESSIONAL OFFICE BUILDING
  • Aerial view of the U.S. Capitol complex in 1964. The O'Neill House Office Building is the caret shaped building in the lower righthand side of the photograph, immediately below the [[Cannon House Office Building]].

O'Neill House Office Building (1947)         
The O'Neill House Office Building was a congressional office building located near the United States Capitol at 301 C Street SE in Washington, D.C.
Congressional office buildings         
  • House office buildings.
Front to Back: Rayburn Building, Longworth Building, Cannon Building. Behind the Cannon Building is the James Madison Memorial Building (part of the Library of Congress) (2015)
OFFICE BUILDING USED BY THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS TO AUGMENT LIMITED SPACE IN THE UNITED STATES CAPITOL
Congressional office building; Senate Office Building; House Office Building; Senate Office Buildings; House Office Buildings
The congressional office buildings are the office buildings used by the United States Congress to augment the limited space in the United States Capitol. The congressional office buildings are part of the Capitol Complex, and are thus under the authority of the Architect of the Capitol and protected by the United States Capitol Police.
John Sevier State Office Building         
BUILDING IN TENNESSEE, UNITED STATES
Tennessee State Office Building
The John Sevier State Office Building, also known as the Tennessee State Office Building, is a historic building in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S..

Wikipedia

O'Neill House Office Building (1947)

The O'Neill House Office Building was a congressional office building located near the United States Capitol at 301 C Street SE in Washington, D.C. Initially known as House Office Building Annex No. 1, it was named after former Speaker of the House Thomas "Tip" O'Neill in 1990.

The building was originally constructed as a hotel in 1947 and operated as the Hotel Congressional, with furnished apartments rented by the month, plus meeting rooms and restaurants. Congress acquired the building in 1957 and leased it back to the hotelier. The Leadership Conference on Civil Rights coordinated lobbying efforts for passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 from Room 410 of the hotel. In 1972, it was turned into an office building and renamed House Office Building Annex No. 1. House Judiciary Committee staffers worked out of the building during the Watergate investigation. From 1983 to 2001, the third and fourth floors of the building were residences for the dormitory for House Pages. The building was declared structurally unsound and demolished in 2002. A parking lot is currently on the site.