Hunziker House

[1] It is located off the Via Gola di Lago in Capriasca (near Tesserete and Lugano), Canton Ticino, Switzerland.

[4] The Hunziker House was listed February 14, 1997 on the National Register of Historic Places as Building #97000087.

The Professor O. F. Hunziker House was designed by architect Charles Wheeler Nicol in 1913 and is now demolished.

In the 1800s, tiny brackets were installed over the earlier dentil trim and a 1+1⁄2-story addition was added to the west side.

[8] The Trach-Hunsicker House has historic importance due to its builder, Rudolph Trach (Drach or Drough).

Upon moving to Monroe County, Trach constructed the house and established a pottery on the property.

[9] One signed and dated sgraffito pie plate produced at the Trach-Hunsicker property is held by the Winterthur Museum, Delaware.

Two historic structures located in the Claremont neighborhood of Hickory, North Carolina[15][16] were built for Dr. Charles Lamar Hunsucker (1890–1965), medical practitioner and lay leader of the Corinth Reformed Church.

The Hunsucker House, located at 266 Fifth Avenue, NE, is a two-story, brick-veneered residence with low hipped roof, dentiled cornice, hip-roofed dormers and a three-bay facade.

[17] The Unzicker-Cook House is located at 2975 Oxford-Middletown Road, Milford Township, Butler County, Ohio.

Daniel Unzicker was a Mennonite preacher and farmer from Bavaria, who arrived in Butler County in 1828 and built the house around 1831.