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Select... 407 Echols - Echols Hill (Pope Residence), Brochure, 1990 Architecture notebook ##: "Southerland Building", at 806 Governors Dr., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook ##: Bandstand, at the town square in Courtland, Alabama. Architecture notebook ##: Bradley House, at 405 Franklin St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook ##: Dr. Frank Haws Farmhouse and Office, in Owens Cross Roads, Alabama. Architecture notebook ##: Dr. Frank Haws Office, at 105 Rands Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook ##: Episcopal Church, at 3738 Meridian St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook ##: Faith Presbyterian Church, at 5003 Whitesburg Dr., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook ##: Feeney-Brooks House, at 203 Lincoln St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook ##: First Alabama Bank Center, at 201 Williams Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook ##: First National Bank, at 10015 S. Memorial Parkway, Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook ##: House at 604 Adams St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook ##: House in Winchester, Tennessee. Architecture notebook ##: House, in Leighton, Alabama. Architecture notebook ##: Houses at 423 and 427 Eustis Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook ##: Huntsville Middle School, at 817 Adams Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook ##: Jones & Herrin, Architects Office, at 104 S. Jefferson St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook ##: Jordan House, at 436 McClung Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook ##: Kaufman Building, at 206 Eustis Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook ##: Ledbetter Office, in Rogersville, Alabama. Architecture notebook ##: Log House at Burritt Museum, Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook ##: Madison Hall at UAH, Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook ##: Miscellaneous Projects, at 10 Cruse Alley, 502 Eustis Ave., 215 Randolph St., and 303 Franklin St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook ##: Office Building for Pepper Insurance, at 120 Marion St., Athens, Alabama. Architecture notebook ##: Ray Jones Residence, at 5005 Garth Rd., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook ##: Thompson Law Office, at 100 Block W. 3rd St., Tuscumbia, Alabama. Architecture notebook ##: Twickenham Church of Christ, at 7500 Whitesburg Dr., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook ##: Twickenham Hotel Demolition, at Clinton St. and Washington St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook ##: William Pepper Residence, at 418 E. Washington St., Athens, Alabama. Architecture notebook 1: Athens State College buildings, Athens, Ala. Architecture notebook 1: Betheny College, near Elkton, Tenn. Architecture notebook 1: Chase Nursery Barn, near Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 1: House at Epes, Ala. Architecture notebook 1: Winston-Orgain House, Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 10: Coleman-Johnson-House, or Westmoreland, Athens, Ala. Architecture notebook 10: Cotton Row, downtown Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 10: Fearn House, or 504 Eustis, or the Fearn-Stewart Home, at 504 Eustis Ave., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 10: Highway 72 Store, near Athens, Ala, and gas station in Collinsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 10: Homes and businesses in New Market, Ala., including the Criner House and the McCaleb House. Architecture notebook 10: McDonald Farm Buildings, Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 10: Morgan House, Scottsboro, Ala. Architecture notebook 10: Newman-Boyd-Cruse House, on E. Clinton Ave., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 10: Old Salem, N.C. Architecture notebook 10: Old Town Historic District, Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 10: Proctor House, or the Scottsboro-Jackson County Heritage Center, Scottsboro, Ala. Architecture notebook 10: Queen Anne-style house and duplexes in Bridgeport, Ala. Architecture notebook 10: Rutledge residence, 111 Calhoun St., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 10: Structures in and around Crawfordsville, Ga. Architecture notebook 10: Structures near downtown Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 10: Van Valkenburgh House, or the Steamboat Gothic House, on Lowe Ave., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 10: Winchester Road 2612, Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 11: Cooper House, at 410 East 6th St., Tuscumbia, Alabama. Architecture notebook 11: Oak Place, or George Steel House, at 808 Maysville Rd., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 12: Magnolia Grove, at 102 Hobson St., Greensboro, Alabama. Architecture notebook 13: A. Good Bookstore, at South Side Square, Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 13: Ashville Masonic Hall, in Ashville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 13: Backs of Buildings (Alleys), in Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 13: Birney Law Office, at 410 Franklin St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 13: Cullman Ice Factory, at 1st Ave. East, Cullman, Alabama. Architecture notebook 13: Harrison Brothers Hardward, at 124 South Side Square, Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 13: J.R. Kennamer Co. Store, in Woodville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 13: Johnson Mahoney Building, Drugstore, and Central Café, at Jefferson and Clinton St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 13: Miscellaneous building exteriors, stores and gas stations. Architecture notebook 13: Old Downtown Huntsville Postcards. Architecture notebook 13: South Side Square Buildings, in Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 13: Southall Building, in Florence, Alabama. Architecture notebook 13: Stapp Residence, at Franklin and Williams St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 13: T. T. Terry Buildings, at South Side Square, Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 14: 1925 Terry Hutchens Building, at 102 Clinton W., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 14: Alabama A&M Domestic Science Building, in Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 14: Chase Depot, by the Chase Nursery, in northeast Huntsville, Chase, Alabama. Architecture notebook 14: Church of Christ, at 110 Randolph St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 14: East Clinton Street, Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 14: East Side Square Miscellaneous Buildings, in Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 14: Fowler and Belk-Hudson Department Stores, at 116 Washington St. and 214 Holmes St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 14: Gas Station, at 300 Clinton E., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 14: Jackson County Courthouse, in Scottsboro, Alabama. Architecture notebook 14: Jefferson and Clinton St. Buildings, in Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 14: Lincoln Mills, at Meridian St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 14: Monroe Business Equipment, at 116 S. Jefferson St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 14: Monte Sano Fire Station, on the east side of Monte Sano Blvd., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 14: North Jefferson Street, Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 14: North Washington Street, Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 14: Peterson Hall at University of Montevallo, in Montevallo, Alabama. Architecture notebook 14: Post Office, at 101 Clinton E., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 14: Southern Furniture Store, at North Side Square, Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 14: Times Building, at 228 Holmes Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 15: Belle Mont, in Tuscumbia, Alabama. Architecture notebook 16: Cain House, at 4828 High St., Mooresville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 16: Cedarhust, or the Ewing-Thornton House, at 2809 Whitesburg Dr., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 16: Dancy-Polk House, in Decatur, Alabama. Architecture notebook 16: Ingleside, at 421 McClung Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 16: Karsner-Kennedy House, in Florence, Alabama. Architecture notebook 16: Moore House, at 111 Steele St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 16: Pope's Tavern, in Florence, Alabama. Architecture notebook 16: Saunders Hall, or the Goode-Hall House, in Lawrence County, Alabama. Architecture notebook 16: Wheeler Grove Baptist Church, near Decatur, Alabama. Architecture notebook 17: 308, 310, and 312 Franklin St. Buildings, in Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 17: Guntersville Presbyterian Church, or First Presbyterian Church, Fellowship Hall, in Guntersville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 17: House at 519 Randolph Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 17: House at 700 Holmes Ave. East, Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 17: House at 702 Holmes Ave. East, Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 17: Lyle Residence, northeast of Decatur, Alabama. Architecture notebook 17: Oaklawn, or the Robinson-Dilworth House, at 2709 Meridian St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 17: Oakwood College, East Hall, at 7000 Adventist Blvd., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 18: McDowell House, or McDowell-Chast-Falt House, at 517 Adams St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 19: Brickell-Holloway House, at 614 Franklin St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 19: Lincoln Street Presbyterian Church, or the First Presbyterian Church, at 312 Lincoln St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 19: Mary Bibb Mausoleum, at Maple Hill Cemetery, Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 19: Outbuilding at the McClung House, Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 19: Poplar Ridge School, in Madison County, Alabama. Architecture notebook 19: Quietdale, in Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 19: Shackelford-McMahon House, or the Wilson Residence, at 833 Hamilton St., Courtland, Alabama. Architecture notebook 19: Trinity Episcopal Church, in Florence, Alabama. Architecture notebook 19: Wiley Thompson House, or Lowe House, at 483 Jack Thomas Rd., Toney, Alabama. Architecture notebook 1A: Architectural details and elements. Architecture notebook 2: Early nineteenth-century architectural details, doors, and windows. Architecture notebook 20: Green Lawn, or the Otey House, south of Meridianville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 21: Lea House, or the Kramer Residence, or Spring Hill, at 302 Green St., Marion, Alabama. Architecture notebook 22: Bibb-Whatley House, or the J.B. Bronaugh House, at 11 Allen St., Madison, Alabama. Architecture notebook 22: Dearing-Swain House, in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Architecture notebook 22: Hauer House, or the Leech-Hauer House, at 502 Governors Dr., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 22: House at 500 Governors Dr., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 22: Huntsville YMCA, at 203 Greene St., N, Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 22: Leckey-Mauldin House, in Leighton, Alabama. Architecture notebook 22: Maroney House, at 740 Lynchburg Hwy, Mulberry, Tennessee. Architecture notebook 22: McCartney-Bone House, or the Bone-Wilbourne House, at 1162 Hurricane Creek Rd., Maysville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 22: Morley House, at 513 Franklin St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 22: New Market United Methodist Church, in New Market, Alabama. Architecture notebook 22: Purdom House, at 409 Randolph St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 23: Isbell-Beck House, at 206 2nd St., Fort Payne, Alabama. Architecture notebook 23: Kaufman Building, at 206 Eustis Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 23: Lee House, in Madison, Alabama. Architecture notebook 23: Locust Hill House, in Tuscumbia, Alabama. Architecture notebook 23: Madison House, in Huntsville, now Madison, Alabama. Architecture notebook 23: Parmer-Murrel-Payne House, in Montgomery County, Alabama. Architecture notebook 23: Washington-Pryor House, or Flower Hill Farm, in Limestone County, Alabama. Architecture notebook 24: W.B. Davis Hosiery Mill, in Fort Payne, Alabama. Architecture notebook 25: Frederick Ball Houses, or Mill Lane Houses, on Habersham St., Savannah, Georgia. Architecture notebook 26: Borders-Blackman House, in Anniston, Alabama. Architecture notebook 27: Pulaski Square Infill House, or the New Mills Lane House, in Pulaski Square, Savannah, Georgia. Architecture notebook 28: Geron House, at 509 Eustis Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 28: Grove-Sammons House, in New Hope, Alabama. Architecture notebook 28: Jeff Blacksmith Shop, in Jeff, Alabama. Architecture notebook 28: Maysville Blacksmith Shop, in Maysville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 28: McWilliams Log House, in Limestone County, Alabama. Architecture notebook 28: Ward House, at 424 McClung Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 28: Woodside, in Belle Mina, Alabama. Architecture notebook 29: Wheeler House, Cotton Garden, and Pond Spring, in Lawrence County, Alabama. Architecture notebook 3: Chapman House, or the Chapman-Johnson Home or Reuben Chapman House, at 2409 Dairy Lane, Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 3: Erskine Clark House, at 515 Franklin St., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 3: Fearn House, or the Fearn-Garth House or Fearn-King Home, at 517 Franklin St., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 3: Hollowell-Mastin House, at 601 Franklin St., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 3: Kelly House, on Kelly Cemetery Rd., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 3: Mastin-Batson House, at 516 Franklin St., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 3: Rhett-Pipes House, at 621 Franklin St., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 3: Sheppard House, at 505 Holmes Ave., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 3: Smith-Dark House, at 704 Adams St., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 30: Butler's Store, at 5498 Main Drive, New Hope, Alabama. Architecture notebook 30: Carpenter Library, in New Hope, Alabama. Architecture notebook 30: Prairie Ave. House, in Eutaw, Alabama. Architecture notebook 30: Temple B'nai Shalom, in Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 31: Heineman House, in Savannah, Georgia. Architecture notebook 32: Bean Hall, or Carnegie Library, at Judson College, in Marion, Alabama. Architecture notebook 33: Bernstein House, at 110 Steele St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 33: Burritt House Museum, at 3101 Burritt Dr., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 33: First Presbyterian Church, in Tuscumbia, Alabama. Architecture notebook 33: House at 104 Steele St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 33: House in Owens Cross Roads, Alabama. Architecture notebook 33: Rhoades House, at 133 Walker Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 33: Rhodesville Log Cabin, in Rhodesville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 33: Sharp Cabin, near Florence in Lauderdale County, Alabama. Architecture notebook 34: Basset-Young House, at 600 Franklin St., and Sanford House, at 601 Madison St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 34: Erskine Hendrick House, at 527 Franklin St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 34: Koger House, west of Florence, Alabama. Architecture notebook 34: Moody Brick House, near Hollywood, Alabama. Architecture notebook 34: Patton House, at 419 McClung Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 34: Rural Buildings, in Gurley, Alabama, Big Cove, Alabama, Jeff, Alabama, Chase, Alabama, and Athens, Alabama. Architecture notebook 34: Van Valkenburg House, at 501 Franklin St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 35: Dr. William Parker Houses, at 324-326 East Bryan St., Savannah, Georgia. Architecture notebook 36: Jemison House, or the Jemison-Van de Graaff Mansion, or the Friedman Library, at 1305 Greensboro Ave., Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Architecture notebook 37: George Spencer House, or the Spencer-Woodbridge House, at 22 Habersham St., Savannah, Georgia. Architecture notebook 38: Francis Stone House, at 402 East State St., Savannah, Georgia. Architecture notebook 39: Carl Jones House, or the Drake-Garth-Jones Farm, at 5003 Garth Rd., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 4: Arlington House Museum, Birmingham, Ala. Architecture notebook 4: Carpenter House, near Eutaw, Ala. Architecture notebook 4: Cotaco Stage House, or the White House at Cotaco, near Cotaco, Ala. Architecture notebook 4: Cotton Hill, on Old Madison Pike, Limestone County, Ala. Architecture notebook 4: Crowson House, at 512 Randolph Ave., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 4: Dickson House, moved to 414 Echols Ave., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 4: Everdale House, near Selma, Ala. Architecture notebook 4: Ford Countess House, on Countess Rd., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 4: House at 413 Eustis Ave., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 4: Vaughan House, in Eutaw, Ala. Architecture notebook 4: Views of Victorian porches in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 40: Various Structures in Mooresville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 41: Lane House, or Lane-Cooper House, at 511 Adams St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 42: Clark-Chandler Cabin, Monte Sano, in Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 42: Cumberland Presbyterian Church, in Manchester, Tennessee. Architecture notebook 42: Hays Residence, at 425 McClung Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 42: House at 710 Holmes Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 42: Kelly House, or Bledsoe-Kelly House, in Sylacauga, Alabama. Architecture notebook 42: Lustron Prefabricated House, at 1105 Harrison Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 42: Pride Tompkins Law Office, or the Godley House, at 106 W 3rd St., Tuscumbia, Alabama. Architecture notebook 42: Smith-Williams Cabin, on Williams Road, Monte Sano, Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 42: Solomon DeBow Log House at 1388 McMullen Road, Gurley, Alabama. Architecture notebook 43: Smith Academy, at 706 Adams St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 44: Judson College Alumnae Hall, in Marion, Alabama. Architecture notebook 45: Church of the Nativity Administration Building, 208 Eustis Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 45: Church of the Nativity, at 212 Eustis Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 45: Church of the Nativity, Ridley Hall, at 210 Eustis Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 45: First Methodist Church, in Athens, Alabama. Architecture notebook 45: Lanford House, at 7400 Old Madison Pike, Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 46: Little Brick Building, in Stevenson, Alabama. Architecture notebook 47: Lane-Gwathney House, at 410 E. Broughton St., Savannah, Georgia. Architecture notebook 48: "Killarney", or the Boganshott House, in Gurley, Alabama. Architecture notebook 48: Gurley Hotel, in Gurley, Alabama. Architecture notebook 48: Old State Bank, Decatur, Alabama. Architecture notebook 48: Peck House, in Cole Springs, Alabama. Architecture notebook 49: Rosenbaum House, in Florence, Alabama. Architecture notebook 5: Bost House, at 421 E. Clinton Ave., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 5: Darwin House, on Darwin Rd., Madison County, Ala. Architecture notebook 5: Figures House, at 423 Randolph Ave., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 5: Gaines House, at 132 Walker Ave., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 5: Garconiere House, at 700 Mesopotamia St., Eutaw, Ala. Architecture notebook 5: Laughinghouse-Sisco House, or Laughinghouse Place, near Bell Factory Rd. in Madison County, Ala. Architecture notebook 5: Paul Cottage, at 710 Adams St., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 5: Pope House, or the Leroy Pope-Watts house or Patton-Echols-Spragins-Watts House, at 403 Echols Ave., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 5: Sublett Cabin, on Moontown Rd. in Madison County, Ala. Architecture notebook 50: Clarkson Covered Bridge, on US Hwy 278, Bethel, Alabama. Architecture notebook 50: Clay House, or the Lewis-Clay-Anderson Home, at 513 Eustis Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 50: Cole-Anglin House, at 769 Love Branch Rd., Harvest, Alabama. Architecture notebook 50: Gray Gables, at 509 Adams St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 50: McMurtrie Residence, from Rehobeth to Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 50: Spotswood House, at 111 Greene St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 51: Meals Log House, or the Meals-Spencer House, at the Burritt Museum, Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 52: Hundley House, at 401 Madison St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 53: Blevins-Mastin House, at 3705 N. Parkway, Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 53: Edgar Love House, at 111 Maple Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 53: Houston House, on West St., Athens, Alabama. Architecture notebook 53: Mitchell-Redd House, at 747 N. Wood Ave., Florence, Alabama. Architecture notebook 54: Conger Log House, in Mulberry, Tennessee. Architecture notebook 54: Cox-White-Faber House, at 312 White St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 54: Heiberger Methodist Church, in Heiberger, Alabama. Architecture notebook 54: Jewett Hall, at Judson College, Marion, Alabama. Architecture notebook 55: First Church of Christ (Scientist), at 807 Owens Dr., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 55: Humphrey-Rogers House, at 502 West Clinton St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 55: Miscellaneous Structures, in Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 56: Miller House, at 1601 Alaca Place, Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Architecture notebook 56: Wakefield, at 450 N. Court St., Florence, Alabama. Architecture notebook 57: "Kalona," in Courtland, Alabama. Architecture notebook 57: Constitution Hall Park, Phase II, in Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 57: Cox-Hilson House, or the Cox-Hilson-Whitten House, at 311 Lincoln St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 57: Draper Residence, on Clinton Ave., Courtland, Alabama. Architecture notebook 57: Historic District, in Marion, Alabama. Architecture notebook 57: House at 443 North Ward Ave., Florence, Alabama. Architecture notebook 57: House at 715 Adams St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 57: Humphries House, at 2883 Mountain Oak Road, Arab, Alabama. Architecture notebook 57: Huntsville City Hall, at 308 Fountain Cir., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 57: Twickenham Houses, in Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 57: W.C. Handy Log House and Museum, in Florence, Alabama. Architecture notebook 57: Walnut Grove Cumberland Presbyterian Church, at 729 Cedar Point Road, New Hope, Alabama. Architecture notebook 57: Zietler-McCrary House, at 4845 High St., Mooresville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 58: Childress Log House, at Ripple Lane, Big Cove, Alabama. Architecture notebook 58: Fisher Oldfield House, at 14202 Meridian Pike, Hazel Green, Alabama. Architecture notebook 58: Freeman House, at 205 Lincoln St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 58: Madison County Courthouse, at Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 58: Mayhew Cottage, at 506 Eustis Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 58: Musgrove House, at 4220 Jackson Road, Florence, Alabama. Architecture notebook 58: Schiffman Building, at 205 East Side Square, Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 58: Siloam Baptist Church, at 505 Washington St., Marion, Alabama. Architecture notebook 59: Bailey Residence, at 702 E. Clinton Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 59: Hagan House, at 24937 Lauderdale St., Mooresville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 59: House at 303 Randolph Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 59: Leigh Place, or Jones Residence, in Leighton, Alabama. Architecture notebook 59: Marmaduke-Williams House, at 907 17th Ave., Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Architecture notebook 6: Bride's Hill, or Sunnybrook House, near Decatur, Ala. Architecture notebook 6: Dowdell House, or Boxwood, at 409 E. North St., Talladega, Ala. Architecture notebook 6: Feeney-Barber House, at 414 Randolph Ave., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 6: Henry Hoss House, Jonesborough, Tenn. Architecture notebook 6: Homes in Courtland, Ala. Architecture notebook 6: House and log barn near Gurley, Ala. Architecture notebook 6: President's House, Huntsville Female College, at 413 Randolph Ave., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 6: St. Mary's Catholic School, Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 60: Dr. Hash Residence, at 514 E. Holmes Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 60: Feeney-Brooks House, at 203 S. Lincoln St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 60: Haws Carriage House, at 606 Greene St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 60: Kelly Residence at 508 8th Ave., Decatur, Alabama. Architecture notebook 60: Law Library, at 205 East Side Square, Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 60: Leckey House, at southwest corner of AL 20 and Co. 48 (County Line), Leighton, Alabama. Architecture notebook 60: New Hope High School, in New Hope, Alabama. Architecture notebook 60: Opera House, at 510 N Gault Ave., Fort Payne, Alabama. Architecture notebook 60: Presbyterian Church, on Main St., Greensboro, Alabama. Architecture notebook 60: Public Inn, at 205 Williams Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 60: Railroad Bridge, at Beaverdam Creek near AL 20, Greenbriar, Alabama. Architecture notebook 60: Rick Roberts House, at 10 Cruse Alley, Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 60: Vaughn-Stacy-Irwin House, at 111 Sam Davis Ave., Pulaski, Tennessee. Architecture notebook 61: Hendricks Hardware Store, at 122 W. Market St., Athens, Alabama. Architecture notebook 62: Brahan-Goldsmith House, at 206 Gates Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 62: Cabins, at DeSoto State Park, Mentone, Alabama. Architecture notebook 62: Clanton House, at 701 Adams St., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 62: Coffman House, at 411 N. Jefferson St., Athens, Alabama. Architecture notebook 62: Erskine Tomb, at Maple Hill Cemetery, Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 62: Goldsmith-Donovan House, at 506 Franklin Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Architecture notebook 62: Murphey House, on Glenwood Rd., Decatur, Alabama. Architecture notebook 62: St. Michael's & All Angels Episcopal Church, at 1000 W. 18th St., Anniston, Alabama. Architecture notebook 62: William Pepper Office, at 118 Marion St., Athens, Alabama. Architecture notebook 62: William Pepper Residence, at 418 E. Washington St., Athens, Alabama. Architecture notebook 63: Athens State College, in Athens, Alabama. Architecture notebook 64: Banister-Lowry House in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 64: Church at 601 Humes Ave. in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 64: Eddins-Benjamin House, moved to Burritt Museum Architecture notebook 64: Forks of Cypress House in Florence, Ala. Architecture notebook 64: Forks of Cypress Slave quarters in Florence, Ala. Architecture notebook 64: Goodwin House in Athens, Ala. Architecture notebook 64: McCrary-Thomas House in New Market, Ala. Architecture notebook 64: William Baker House in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 65: 422 Eustis Ave in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 65: 510 Holmes Avenue in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 65: 8 Cruse Alley in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 65: Erskine Tomb in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 65: Henderson National Bank in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 66: 1308 Church St. in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 66: 302 Oakwood Ave in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 66: Blackburn House in Limestone County, Ala. Architecture notebook 66: Co 55 Pettusville Rd in Limestone County, Ala. Architecture notebook 66: First Presbyterian Church in Eufala, Ala. Architecture notebook 66: Mars Hill House in Florence, Ala. Architecture notebook 66: Railroad Depot in Eufaula, Ala. Architecture notebook 66: Waterloo Log House near Florence, Ala. Architecture notebook 66: Wyle Laboratories in Madison, Ala. Architecture notebook 67: Gorgas House in Tuscaloosa, Ala. Architecture notebook 68: 1111 Pulaski Pike in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 68: 2400 Triana Blvd in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 68: Adams Log House near Fort Hampton Rd in Elkmont, Ala. Architecture notebook 68: Building at corner of Court Street and Tennessee Street in Florence, Ala. Architecture notebook 68: Harrison Brothers Hardware in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 68: Hundley Building at 128 South Side Square in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 68: Jude-Crutcher House at Winchester Road in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 68: Morris and Shelton Family Dogtrot Architecture notebook 68: Spring Mill in Oxford, Ala. Architecture notebook 68: West Holmes Ave in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 69: 112 Spragins St. in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 69: Beaty-Mason House in Athens, Ala. Architecture notebook 69: Central Presbyterian Church in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 69: Clemens House in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 69: Huntsville-Madison County Chamber of Commerce Building in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 69: Jones House at 17 Front St. in Madison, Ala. Architecture notebook 69: McGehee-Stringfellow House near Greensboro, Ala. Architecture notebook 69: Saddlebag Log House near Big Cove in Madison County, Ala. Architecture notebook 7: Clifton Place, on Annie Wade Rd. near Pulaski, Tenn. Architecture notebook 7: Myrtle Hall, or Kirkwood, near Eutaw, Ala. Architecture notebook 7: Urguhart Log House, Toney, Ala. Architecture notebook 7: White-Turner-Sanford House, or the Lewis-Sanford Home, at 601 Madison St., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 70: 100-102 S. Jefferson St. in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 71: Fletcher-Lowe House at 210 Williams Avenue in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 72: 98 Brookwood Dr in Athens, Ala. Architecture notebook 74: 1829 Alabama Capitol Building in Tuscaloosa, Ala. Architecture notebook 74: Dearing House in Tuscaloosa, Ala. Architecture notebook 76: Cathedral Church of the Advent in Birmingham, Ala. Architecture notebook 77: WMU Dorm in Marion, Ala. Architecture notebook 78: Historic District in Athens, Ala. Architecture notebook 79: Grover Hotel in Guntersville, Ala. Architecture notebook 8: 1837 Somerville Courthouse, in Somerville, Ala. Architecture notebook 8: Cummings-Lewis-Nelson House, Limestone County, Ala. Architecture notebook 8: Donnell House, in Athens, Ala. Architecture notebook 8: Historic bungalows in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 8: Houses at 403 and 405 Franklin St., including the Bradley House, Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 8: Houston House, or Gilchrest-Houston-Rice House or Rice House, Houston Ave., in Somerville, Ala. Architecture notebook 8: Leroy Pope House, on McClung Ave., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 8: Sunnyside, or Hampton House, Hampton Log Home, or Green Lawn, in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 8: Whitman-Cobb House, on Winchester Rd., New Market, Ala. Architecture notebook 80: 210 W. Harris in Savannah, Ga. Architecture notebook 80: Abraham Sheftall House on Columbia Square in Savannah, Ga. Architecture notebook 80: Bull St. in Savannah, Ga. Architecture notebook 80: Dennis Tenements at Lincoln Street in Savannah, Ga. Architecture notebook 80: Mill Lane Residence near Pulaski Square in Savannah, Ga. Architecture notebook 80: Owens Thomas House in Savannah, Ga. Architecture notebook 80: Temple of Ceres in Alligator Creek, Fla. Architecture notebook 80: Unitarian Church in Savannah, Ga. Architecture notebook 80: William Scarborough House in Savannah, Ga. Architecture notebook 81: Taliaferro Hall in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 83: 132 Walker Ave in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 83: 219 W. Clinton Ave in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 83: 307 Randolph Ave in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 83: 413 Randolph Ave in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 83: 507 Franklin Ave in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 83: 808 Maysville Rd in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 85A: Service Station and American Legion at 421 N. Jefferson St. in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 85A: Sites and Outbuildings at the Train Depot in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 85A: Storm damage to historic train depot in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 85A: Train Depot Second Floor in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 85A: Train Depot Third Floor in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 85A: West Side of Church Street in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 85B: Freight Depot in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 86: 300 E. Clinton Service Station in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 86: C&G Railroad Roundhouse in Columbus, Miss. Architecture notebook 86: Freight Depot in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 86: L&N Roundhouse & Turntable in Birmingham, Ala. Architecture notebook 86: Southern Railroad Shops and Turntable in Birmingham, Ala. Architecture notebook 87: Blevins-Mastin House in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 87: Central Presbyterian Church in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 87: Central Presbyterian House in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 87: County Houses Information Architecture notebook 87: Darwin Log House in Madison County, Ala. Architecture notebook 87: Ford-Countess house in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 87: Laughinghouse-Sisco House in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 87: Sublett Cabin near Moontown, Ala. Architecture notebook 9: Bannister Alley House in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 9: Burkett Log House, near Hobbs Island Rd., Madison County, Ala. Architecture notebook 9: Chadwick House, or the Sprague-Chadwick House, at 307 Randolph Ave., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 9: Clarke House, or the Fackler-Pynchon-Powell House, at 518 Adams St., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 9: Clopton House, on Homer Nance Rd. in Madison County, Ala. Architecture notebook 9: Clopton log barn, on Homer Nance Rd. in Madison County, Ala. Architecture notebook 9: Cruse-Rolfe House, at 600 Adams St., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 9: Gamble House, Limestone County, Ala. Architecture notebook 9: Jordan Road House, or the Flint River Place, at 1997 Jordan Rd., Madison County, Ala. Architecture notebook 9: Laughinghouse-Phelps-Jones House, or Browning Place, on Pulaski Pike, Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 9: Log House and Byers Nursery, in Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 9: Log House at N. Beaty St. and Wood St. in Athens, Ala. Architecture notebook 9: Log House in Greenbrier, Ala. Architecture notebook 9: Log houses on Hurricane Valley Rd. and Hurricane Creek Rd. in Madison County, Ala. Architecture notebook 9: Sumpter House, in Pulaski, Tenn. Architecture notebook 9: Trimble, Stan Residence, Prospect, Tennessee. Architecture notebook 9: UAH Chapel, or Union Chapel Church or UAH Art Gallery, moved in 1974 to Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 9: Yeatman House, at 528 Adams St., Huntsville, Ala. Architecture notebook 9. Aunt Fanny's Cabin, in Jeff, Ala. Architecture noteboook 23: Benjamin-Underwood House, in Autaugaville, Alabama. Frances C. Roberts Paper "The Role of Madison County in Achieving Statehood for Alabama" [and Harvie P. Jones "Constitution Hall Park Architectural Notes"]
Description
Select... "Gray Gables," built in 1893 by H. Poole. The front was altered in 1916 following a fire. Victorian style, originally had a two-story enclosed porch. Located at 509 Adams St., Huntsville, Alabama. "Kalona," built in 1850, and rebuilt in 1904 by Edgar L. Love, architect. Restored in 1997. Located about 3 miles southeast of Courtland, Alabama. "Killarney" was built in 1917. Also known as the Boganshott House. Owner Frank Hall was the grandson of Captain Frank Gurley of the Civil War. John Boganshott, original owner, married one of Frank Gurley's daughters. Includes a large barn on the property. Located in Gurley, Alabama. "Little Brick," built in the 1850s. Greek Revival style. Only a few sections of masonry were left standing so Harvie Jones classified it as a "reconstruction" rather than "restoration." This old brick home served as General Rosecrans' headquarters during the summer of 1863. Located in Stevenson, Alabama. "Wakefield," or Zac Abramson Residence, built in 1825 by James Sample. Thought to be the first brick residence in Florence, Wakefield was built with Adamesque detail. Prominent visitors include William L. Yancey and General Steven D. Lee. Located at 450 N. Court St., Florence, Alabama. 110 South Side Square, built by George Steele c. 1850s. 108 South Side Square. 106 South Side Square. 104 South Side Square, built c. 1900, remodeled c. 1977. 102 South Side Square, built c. 1966 after pre-1820 demolition. 100 South Side Square, built c. 1960. 112 South Side Square, built late 1800s. Located in Huntsville, Alabama. Burned c. 1978. 116 and 118 South Side Square. 114 South Side Square, burnt c. 1978. East Side Square 231, built c. 1840s with c. 1885 facade. Northington, Smith, and Kramert Architecture. Schiffman Building, built c. 1840 and remodeled c. 1885, located at 231 East Side Square. 126 South Side Square, Late Victorian building. American National Bank, built late 1800s. Huntsville, Alabama. 117 East Clinton Ave., built early 20th century, storefront c. 1980. 114 Jefferson St. South, built early 20th century, storefront c. 1985. 104 Jefferson St., built c. 1920, storefront 1986. Located in Huntsville, Alabama. 1834 Lane House, also known as the Lane-Cooper house, owned in 1988 by John Shaver. Federal Period house built by Dabney Wharton and the Brandon Brothers. Thomas and William Brandon were mechanics and master buildings in Huntsville, specializing in masonry. Included a winter kitchen in the basement. Located at 511 Adams St., Huntsville, Alabama. 1840s-1850s Solomon DeBow Log House, Country-Greek Revival with Italianate and Victorian details. Solomon DeBow purchased the land at age 22 to build this house on. DeBow was a Confederate soldier of Co. H in the 35th Alabama Infantry. Located at 1388 McMullen Road, Gurley, Alabama. 300 Clinton East gas station, built c. 1914. Located in Huntsville, Alabama. Demolished February 4, 1986. A dogtrot built in the early 1800s. Wainscotting and other detail work done by enslaved artisans. Breezeway enclosed at the turn of the century. Later additions include a lean-to roof added sometime in the 1920s. Located in Madison County, Ala. A letter detailing the preservation activities of Harvie Jones in and around Madison County, Ala. A planned writer's studio and retreat near Fernandina, Fla. Addresses and locations of the structures pictured may no longer be accurate, as street names and house numbers change over time. The addresses given reflect the information provided by Harvie Jones at the time he documented these structures. Administration Building to the Church of the Nativity, built c. 1870. Two story restoration. Located at 208 Eustis Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Alabama A&M Domestic Science Building, built c. 1911. Classical style. Located in Huntsville, Alabama. Apartment builing constructed in 1928. Metal awning added in 1950s. Located at 422 Eustis Avenue in Huntsville, Ala. Arlington House Museum, built c. 1840. Greek Revival style. Located in Birmingham, Alabama. Articles and notes on a possible historic district in Athens. Included are a list of historic residential structures that might anchor the district: Sloss-Pettus-Cook House, Annette Apartments, Nazaretian House, and Garino House. Located in Athens, Ala. Assessments of damage to the Huntsville train depot after the 1998 storm. Located in Huntsville, Ala. Assorted photographs of doors, shutters, windows, plaster finishes, gates, latches, locks, hasps, hinges, rods, door pulls, racks, and bolts. Includes details from the Fearn House, Phelps Jones House, Kelly House, Grove-Bassett House, Chapman House, McCrary-Thomas House, Mooresville Post Office, Mooresville Store, Erskine-McMains House, and Cades Cove. Assorted photographs of posts and fences, gates, brick patterns, foot scrapers, coach mounts, cut stone, dairy troughs, vents, chimneys, brick bonds, gutters, cornices, clapboards, backboards, windows, trim, hinges, building frames, siding, carriage houses, rafters, flooring, mantles, stairs, handrails, and doors. Athens State College, originally built in the 1830s renovation took place in 1979-80. Jones & Herrin, Architects worked on eight buildings including Founder's Hall (c. 1830), Brown Hall (c. 1900), Sanders Hall (early 20th century), Union Building (c. 1966), McCandless Hall (c. 1912), Houston Hall, Naylor Hall, and McCain Hall (c. 1940s). Located in Athens, Alabama. Aunt Fanny's Cabin, log house built c. 1830. Located in Jeff in Madison County, Alabama. Auto building and former American Legion meeting hall located in Huntsville, Ala. Bailey Residence, built in the 1920s. Renovation was never executed by Jones and Herrin, Architectures. Located at 702 E. Clinton Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Bank building, built 1925. Architect B. F. Hunt. Located at 102 Clinton West, Huntsville, Alabama. Bannister Alley House. Federal style. Located on Bannister Alley, Huntsville, Alabama. Demolished September 1979. Basset-Young House, built c. 1819. located at 600 Franklin St., Huntsville, Alabama. Sanford House, located at 601 Madison St., Huntsville, Alabama. Bean Hall, also known as Carnegie Library, at Judson College, built c. 1905. Neo-classical style. Located in Marion, Alabama. Belle Mont, also known as the Henry Thornton Plantation, built c. 1828. Palladian-influenced Federal Period architecture. Located in Tuscumbia in Colbert County, Alabama. The first owner of the house was Alexander W. Mitchell, who was once a neighbor of Thomas Jefferson. There is some speculation that the designer of this home was the same designer of Jefferson's home Monticello. Benjamin-Underwood House, built c. 1840. Federal period "I" type house. Originally located about 8 miles west of Autaugaville in Autauga County, Alabama before it was moved in 1985 to another location in the same Mulberry community on Jones Bluff Dam Rd. Bernstein house, built c. 1881. Italiante style. Located at 110 Steele St., Huntsville, Alabama. Betheny College, built c. 1840s. Greek Revival style. Located on Bryson Road near Elkton, Giles County, Tennessee. Bibb-Whatley House, also known as the J. B. Bronaugh house, built 1867. Greek Revival style. Located at 11 Allen St., Madison, Alabama. It is the oldest known house in Madison, Alabama. The house was first owned by James H. Bibb, an early settler in Madison. Birney Law Office, built c. 1820s. Located at 410 Franklin St. in Huntsville, Alabama. Blevins-Mastin house built c. 1830-1840. Served as a church and later as a parsonage. Most of the fireplaces were rebricked. Original square head nails and roofing nails present throughout. Located at 3705 N. Memorial Parkway in Huntsville, Ala. Borders-Blackman House, built c. 1840. Late-Federal period "I" type house. Located north of Anniston, Alabama. The master carpenters who built the residence, Lev and Griff, were enslaved to John Borders, the first resident of the home. Bost House, built c. 1896. Eastlake style. Located at 421 East Clinton Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Bradley House, built in the 19th century in stages. Restoration in 1974-1976 on exterior. Front porch was made smaller. Located at 405 Franklin St., Huntsville, Alabama. Brahan-Goldsmith House, previously the Bernstein House, built circa 1818 in the Federal Period style with Greek Revival wings attached to the sides in 1834. Additional wings were added after 1871 and a kitchen wing in 1888. The breezeway was enclosed in 1913 to create three rooms. Located at 206 Gates Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Brickell-Holloway House. First floor built pre-1824, second flooor built c. 1887. Federal and Victorian styles. Garage built c. 1938. Located at 614 Franklin St. in Huntsville, Alabama. Bride's Hill, or Sunnybrook House, built c. 1830 by Elizabeth Dandridge. Federal and 20th Century style. Tidewater-type cottage. Located near Highway 20 West of Decatur, Alabama. Bridgeport, Alabama. Queen Anne style house, built c. 1890. The house was said to be built by McKim, Mead, and White, but this is likely false. Duplexes, built c. 1890. Also said to be built by McKim, Mead, and White, but this is likely false. Built around 1880-1890. Brick construction, sashes and windows were cut out around the 1950s. Previously the First National Bank of Florence and a jewelry store. Located at the corner of Court and Tennessee streets in Florence, Ala. Built c. 1916. Originally a store. Later refurbished into Hale Bros Furniture. Currently a law office. Located in Huntsville, Ala. Built circa 1819 for William Jay Scarborough in a mix of Greek Revival and English Regency styles. Renovated in 1978. Features a raised portico and Doric columns. Current home of the Ships of the Sea Maritime Museum in Savannah, Ga. Built in 1829 as a post office and dining hall. Became a professor's residence in 1847. Portico added in 1853. Enlarged in 1897. Located at Ninth and Capstone in Tuscaloosa, Ala. Built in 1885. The Blue Spring Mill operated as a textile mill before shutting down. Demolished in 1998 for a mall. Near I-20 in Oxford, Ala. Built in 1890, Victorian style house. Used as the Twickenham Baptist Church. The porch was added around the 1920s. Located at 710 Holmes Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Built in 1891. Older limestone foundation hints at antebellum residence. Makeshift add-ons since then. Porch dates from the 1920s. Barn behind the home. Probably dates from the same period. Converted into a pastoral office for Hope Community Pentecostal Church. Located off Pulaski Pike in Huntsville, Ala. Built in 1896, the facade features an older Italianate style. It has undergone numerous renovations, but some ledges and design features from its tenure as a photography studio persist. Located in Huntsville, Ala. Built in 1922. The shop served two mill villages and was lit by natural light. Located at the corner of Triana and 9th Ave in Huntsville, Ala. Built in the early 1820s with later add-ons. The portico is Greek Revival style. The kitchen and fireplace crane served as the inspiration for the "Boardman kitchen" at Alabama Constitution Village. Located at 211 S. Beaty St. in Athens, Ala. Bungalows in Huntsville. Eastlake-style house at 308 Eustis Ave., built 1899. House with a Dutch-Colonial Revival gambel roof, Victorian massing, and Gothic vent, located at 603 Franklin St. and built by Herbert Cowell in 1901. "Free Classic" style house at 501 Franklin St., built c. 1902, designed by Herbert Cowell. Free Colonial Revival style house at 418 McClung Ave., built 1907. Bungalow at 531 Franklin St., designed by Edgar Love. Swiss style bungalow at 612 East Holmes Ave., built 1914. Prairie style bungalow derived from a Frank Lloyd Wright design located at 709 East Randolph Ave., built 1919. Pair of identical bungalows at 430 and 432 Locust Ave., built 1923. Swiss influenced bungalow at 418 Locust Ave., built by Fisk & Hopper contractors in 1922. Bungalows on north Meridian St., built early 1920s by Lincoln Mills. Pair of Spanish Colonial Revival style houses at 136 and 138 Walker Ave., built 1929 by Harold Riggins. English Cottage style house at 609 Randolph Ave., built c. 1930. "Cape Cod Cottage" revival style house on Sewanee Rd., built early 1940s. "Ranch-Colonial" style house on Lucerne Dr., built 1960s. Bungalows at 610 and 602 East Clinton Rd. Prairie style bungalow at 406 Eustis Ave. Dreger House, bungalow at 610 East Holmes. House at 531 Franklin St., built c. 1907. Early 20th century house at 608 Franklin St. Late-Victorian style house at 436 McClung. House east of Jackson Way, built c. 1920s. "Craftsman style" bungalow at 517 Eustis Ave. House at 708 Randolph Ave. Houses at 424 and 443 Locust Ave. Burkett Log House. Includes two 20th century barns as well as a log corn crib probably built in the mid-1800s. Located off Hobbs Island Rd., Hegia Burrow Rd., and Cap Atkins Rd., Madison County, Alabama. Burritt House Museum, completed c. 1940 because the first version burned near completion. Built by Dr. Burritt with consultation of Edgar Love. Mostly Neo-Classical style. The house has mantles in a variety of styles, many probably designed by Dr. Burritt, although some have been removed. Located at 3101 Burritt Dr. SE on Round-top Mountain in Huntsville, Alabama. Burritt Museum Log House, built in the 1960s using 1840s logs only. Has breezeway in the middle. The reconstruction planned by Harvie Jones was completed in 1994 without his or any architectural guidance. Located in Huntsville, Alabama. Butler's Store, built in the early 20th century. It is made up of three buildings, two constructed in 1909 and one in 1939, and there are additions from the 1920s. Commercial style. Located at 5498 Main Drive in New Hope in Madison County, Alabama. Eventually converted into the Elizabeth Carpenter Library. Added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 31, 1992. Cain House, built late 19th century. Late Victorian style. Includes an outbuilding and a 20th century garage. Located at 4828 High St. in Mooresvile, Alabama. Carl Jones House, also known as the Drake-Garth-Jones Farm, built c. 1823 by James Drake. Federal Period. Located at 5003 Garth Rd. in Huntsville, Alabama. Carpenter House, built in the 1850s. Greek Revival style. Includes a 1950s outbuilding. Located west of Eutaw, Alabama. Carpenter Library, built c. 1920-50. Originally a store. Located in New Hope in Madison County, Alabama. Cedarhurst, also known as the Ewing-Thornton House, built c. 1825-1828. Palladian-influenced Federal Period architecture. Located at 2809 Whitesburg Dr., Huntsville, Alabama Central Presbyterian Church. Brick and limestone exterior. Built circa 1900 with small repairs in 1984. Located at the corner of Lincoln and Randolph in Huntsville, Ala. Chadwick House, also known as the Sprague-Chadwick house, built c. 1832. Federal style with Victorian additions to the west and north. Located at 307 Randolph Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Chapman House, also known as the Chapman-Johnson Home and the Reuben Chapman house, built c. 1830. Greek Revival style. Includes a house for enslaved servants and smokehouse built c. 1850s. Located at 2409 Dairy Lane, Huntsville, Alabama. The property used to be the Chapman dairy, which suppled milk for the Monte Sano area, and it was the dairy where the cow Lily Flagg was kept. Chase Depot, built September 1937 by the Chase Nursery. Located in Chase in northeast Huntsville. The Chase depot was the smallest union station in the country and was turned into the North Alabama Railroad Museum. Chase Nursery Barn, built c. 1915. Located near Moores Mill Road near Huntsville, Alabama. Childress Log House, built in 1811. Moved from original location in 1832. Owner Robert Childress had 17 children. House had asphalt siding and a Victorian style porch. Located at Ripple Lane, Big Cove, Alabama. Church of Christ, built c. 1885. Spire replaced c. 1970. Located at 110 Randolph St. in Huntsville, Alabama. Clanton House, built 1892. Restoration of building details began in 1996. Aluminum siding was replaced with narrow vinyl siding rather than recommended restoration replacement due to budget constraints. Located at 701 Adams St., Huntsville, Alabama. Clark-Chandler Cabin, built in the 1840s. Moved and rebuilt in the 1970s at Burritt Museum. Logs and possibly stones are original, rest of the materials are from the rebuild in the 1970s. Located on Monte Sano, Huntsville, Alabama. Clarke House, also known as the Fackler-Pynchon-Powell House, built c. 1835. Located at 518 Adams St., Huntsville, Alabama. Clarkson Covered Bridge, built in 1904. Rebuilt in 1921 after it was destroyed by a flood and an additional two outer piers were added in 1974. Located in Cullman County, Alabama. Clifton Place, built c. 1812. Federal and Greek Revival styles. Located on Annie Wade Road, approximately seven miles northwest of Pulaski, Tennessee. Clopton House, built 1818. Federal style with Victorian addition. Located on Homer Nance Rd. in northeast Madison County, Alabama. Burned 1982. Clopton log barn, built 1818. Located on Homer Nance Rd. in northeast Madison County, Alabama. Burned 1982. Coffman House, built c. 1900. Minor work completed on the porch and rear entry by Jones & Herrin, Architects. Owned by Dr. Manion Coffman. The house was built by his grandfather. Located at 411 N. Jefferson St., Athens, Alabama. Cole-Anglin House, built in 1880 on the corner of Jeff Rd. and Douglas Rd. The west rear wing was demolished In 1993 and moved to 769 Love Branch Rd., Harvest, Alabama in 1994. Coleman-Jones House, or Westmoreland, built 1855. Porch addition and cupola removal 20th century. Italianate and Federal styles. Located in Athens, Alabama. Conger House, built in 1805. Harvie Jones states that the 1850s is more accurate for built date due to architecture evidence. Federal period style, moved to Burritt Museum. Originally located between Fayetteville and Mulberry, Tennessee. Constitution Hall Park, or Constitution Village, Phase II construction took place between 1970-1982. Includes the Walker Allen Cabinet Shop and the Boardman Building. Located in Huntsville, Alabama. Copies of Huntsville postcards displaying historic Huntsville buildings. The West side of the square. Huntsville Hospital, built early 20th century and demolished c. 1980. The East side of the square c. 1955. Huntsville Y.M.C.A. c. 1913. City Hall undert construction, 1963. Big Spring Park in the 1940s and 1930s. Correspondence between Harvie Jones and Gregory Smith about relocating the O'Neal house located at 203 S. Lincoln St. in Huntsville, Ala. Correspondence from Harvie Jones to Martha Simms regarding restoration of the Mellon house. Located near the Central Presbyterian Church at 201 S. Lincoln St. in Huntsville, Ala. Cotaco Stage House, also known as the White House at Cotaco, built c. 1819. Federal style. Listed on the Alabama Register of Historic Places on March 8, 1994. Located a half mile south of Cotaco, Alabama in Morgan County. Is said to have been the county courthouse before the construction of the 1840s courthouse in Somerville. Cotton Hill, built c. 1832. Federal style. Located in Limestone County off Old Madison Pike. Cotton Row. Includes the Courthouse, the First National Bank, Big Spring, and buildings from the west side of the square on Cotton Row built 1834, c. 1830, and in the late 1800s. Located in Downtown Huntsville, Alabama. Courtland, two houses built in the Federal Period. Federal style with 20th Century and Victorian style additions. Porch addition c. 1920s. Located in Courtland, Alabama. Cox House, also known as Cox-Whitten-Hilson home, built in 1826, in the large, symmetrical antebellum style for Joshua Cox. This house has 14 and 16 foot high ceilings, contributing to its nickname of the "Spite House" since the unusually high ceilings resulted in the owners spiteful wish to block the Leroy Pope house. It was later used as apartments. Located at 311 Lincoln St., Huntsville, Alabama. Crowson House, built c. 1915. Located at 512 Randolph Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Cruse-Rolfe House, built c. 1825 by William and Samuel Cruse. Federal style with Greek Revival additions. Located at 600 Adams St., Huntsville, Alabama. Cullman Ice Factory, built c. 1880-1890. Located at 1st Ave. East, Cullman, Alabama. Cumberland Presbyterian Church, built in the 1890s. Set to be the city arts center around the time pictures were taken in 1992. Located on Church St. in Manchester, Tennessee. Cummings-Lewis-Nelson House, built c. 1809. Located in northeast Limestone County, Alabama. Dancy-Polk House, built c. 1828. Palladian-influenced Federal Period architecture. Located in Decatur, Alabama. Darwin House, built in the early 1800s. Log dogtrot cabin with a Victorian addition. Located on Darwin Rd. in Madison County, Alabama. Dearing-Swain House, built post-1846 by A.B. Dearing. Greek Revival style. Located in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Demolition of the Twickenham Hotel. Was to be replaced by a parking deck. Located at Clinton St. and Washington St., Huntsville, Alabama. DeSoto State Park cabins, built c. 1933. Eleven cabins were built over the course of roughly ten years. Renovated by Jones and Herrin, Architects. Located near Mentone, Alabama. Dickson House, built c. 1833. Federal and Greek Revival style. Originally located at 106 Lincoln St. between East Holmes Ave. and East Clinton St. in Huntsville, Alabama. Dismantled in 1981 for re-erection at 414 Echols Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Documentation of plans to alter the residence at 111 Calhoun St. in Huntsville's Old Town, submitted to the Huntsville Historical Preservation Committee, 1979. Includes drawings and photographs of the structure and property before and after the alterations. Dogtrot built c. 1842. Cabin includes its original fireplace, log notching, and pockets cut for rafters. Later additions included 3 rooms, 2 porches, and a tin roof. Located near Moontown, Ala. Dogtrot cabin built between 1820-1840. Trot enclosed between 1890-1910. Located at Mars Hill near Florence, Ala. Dogtrot cabin built c. 1820-1850. The gate features carved decorations. Located near the Elk River in Limestone Couny, Ala. Dogtrot cabin built in the early 1800s near Elkmont, Ala. Dogtrot log house built between 1850-1870 near Route 2 in Florence, Ala. Donnell House, built 1851. Designed by Hiram Higgins and built by Alexander Hamilton. Originally home to Robert Donnell, a founder of the Cumberland Presbytarian Church and supposedly the preacher of the first sermon in Madison County. Located in Athens, Alabama. Dowdell House, or Boxwood, built c. 1850s. Gothic Revival. Located at 406 E. North St., Talladega, Alabama. Dr. Frank and Patsy Haws Farmhouse and Office, designed by Harvie P. Jones in 1991. Completed by 1993. Contains a sleeping balcony. The office has an attached bathroom as well. Located in Owens Cross Roads, Alabama. Dr. Frank Haws Office, exterior remodelling completed in 1993 by Jones & Herrin, Architects. Located at 105 Rands Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Dr. Hash Residence, built c. 1870 and c. 1900. Renovation included a potting shed and three car garage. Located at 514 E. Holmes Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Dr. James L. Jordan residence, remodeled once before in 1925 by D. Anderson Dickey, Architect. Contains multiple porches and a balcony. Located at 436 McClung Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Dr. John Ledbetter and Dr. Edith (Jones) Ledbetter Orrice, built in 1964. Located in Rogersville, Alabama. Dr. William Murphey House, built c. 1818. Log and stone house renovated with the help of Trico Steel Company and the Alabama Historical Commission. Dr. Murphey owned a large plantation as well. Located on Glenwood Rd., near Decatur, Alabama. Dr. William Parker Houses, built c. 1806. Federal and Victorian styles. Addition c. 1840. Located in Warren Square at 324-326 East Bryan St. in Savannah, Georgia. Draper Residence, built c. 1830 in Federal and Victorian style. Records indicate the presence of a outbuilding, servants house, shed, barn, and well at one point. Colonial Revival Tabernacle style frame built around the front door and a Victorian veranda added c. 1920. Located on Clinton Ave., Courtland, Alabama. Early 20th century hotel. Featured a balustrade, though that was removed following renovations in the late 1940s. Located in Guntersville, Ala. Eastlake style house built affter 1888 and before 1894. A brick wing was enlarged after 1894. Renovated to be an office. Located at 303 Randolph Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Eastlake Style Victorian House, Tom White Residence (1995) built c. 1890. An apartment was added later to the existing floor plan, year unknown of addition. A detached garage was added between 1915 and 1925 but it was later demolished. Located at 443 North Ward Ave., Florence, Alabama. Eddins-Benjamin House, built c. 1810 with additions in 1930. Wood frame early 19th century vernacular style. Originally located at 28305 Shannon Dr. Ardmore, AL Edgar Love House, built c. 1900, moved from original site c. 1920s to Maple Ave. House was demolished by owners in 1995. Last located at 111 Maple Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Elbert H. Parsons Madison County Law Library, built 1914, was originally a Deparment store and an adult movie theater. A skylighted window was installed on the walkway in front of the building when c. 1830 brick was uncovered 12 inches below the present walkway. Located at 205 East Side Square, Huntsville, Alabama. English Gothic style church. Construction began in 1887. Located at the corners of 20th St and 6th Ave in Northside Birmingham, Ala. Episcopal Church of the Nativity, built in 1859. Has an Victorian style exterior gate added around 1879. Its history is investigate by Harvie Jones throughout his notes. Located at 212 Eustis Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Episcopal Church, designed by Harvie Jones in 1963. Located near A&M University on Meridian St., Huntsville, Alabama. Erskine Clark House, built 1819 and heavily remodeled c. 1840-1850 or built c. 1840-1850. Federal and Greek Revival styles. Located at 515 Franklin St., Huntsville, Alabama. Erskine Hendrick house, built c. 1818. Federal and Greek Revival styles with a Victorian style porch. Includes servants quarters and a smokehouse. Located at 527 Franklin St., Huntsville, Alabama. Erskine mausoleum. Built early 20th century. Located in Maple Hill Cemetery in Huntsville, Ala. Erskine Tomb, built in the 1820s. Mausoleum complete with bronze doors and granite stone. Located at Maple Hill Cemetery, Huntsville, Alabama. Everdale House, built 1829. Late Federal and Greek Revival style. Slave quarters, built c. 1850s. Located near Selma, Alabama in Dallas County. Fearn House, also known as the Fearn-Garth House and the Fearn-King Home, built c. 1820-1840. Federal and Greek Revival styles. Located at 517 Franklin St., Huntsville, Alabama. Fearn House, or 504 Eustis, or the Fearn-Stewart Home, built c. 1860. Mid-19th century Italianate-Gothic style. Located at 504 Eustis Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Federal Period house in Owens Cross Roads, Alabama. Built in the late 19th century. Italiante style. Includes a Victorian and a 20th century addition. Located south of Highway 431. Feeney-Barber House, built c. 1825-1832. Federal Style. Located at 414 Randolph Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Restored 1975. Feeney-Brooks House, or the Miller House, built in 1829. Original structure added onto in 1861, and again in the eary 20th century. The house was demolished in 1983 by Central Presbyterian Church despite objections from the Huntsville Historical Preservation Commission, for an elaborate garden the Church never built. Located at 203 S. Lincoln St., Huntsville, Alabama. Fellowship Hall was demolished by a tornado in 1990 and damaged the classroom building and the recreational building. It also blew the church steeple off. Located at 5003 Whitesburg Dr., Huntsville, Alabama. Figures House, built c. 1840-1850s. Located at 423 Randolph Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. George Steele was the architect for this house. First Alabama Bank Center, built 1963-1964 by Jones and Herrin, Architects. Converted to a "Regions" Bank in 1997. Located at 201 Williams Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. First Church of Christ (Scientist), built in 1975. Located at 807 Owens Dr., Huntsville, Alabama. First Methodist Church, built in 1836. Became the Church of Christ in 1993. Remodeled as furniture store in the 20th century. Located on Marion St., Athens, Alabama. First National Bank, designed in 1969-1970 by Jones & Herrin, Architects. Located at 10015 S. Memorial Parkway, Huntsville, Alabama. First Presbyterian Church in Tuscumbia. Built 1827. Federal style with Gothic style windows, also known as "Georgian Gothick," and a Victorian addition. Located onn Fourth and Broad Streets in Tuscumbia, Alabama. Ford Countess House, built c. 1822 by John Ford. Includes a school house in the yard. Federal and Victorian styles. Located off Countess Rd. in Huntsville, Alabama. Fort Payne Opera House, built c. 1885, set to be partially renovated in 1979 but never executed due to small budget. Located at 510 N. Gault Ave., Fort Payne, Alabama. Founders Hall, built c. 1840, and Houston Hall, built 1907, Athens State College. Located on the campus of Athens State University in Athens, Alabama. Fowler and Belk-Hudson's Department Stores, built 1930 and 1936. The Depression-era Commercial style buildings were eventually connected in the 1950s. Located at 116 Washington St. and 214 Holmes St., Huntsville, Alabama. Added to the National Register of Historic Places on May 30, 1996. Francis Stone House, built c. 1821. Federal Period. Located at 402 East State St., Savannah, Georgia. Franklin St-Buildings 308, 310, and 312. Built in the early 19th century, and demolished c. 1950 for urban renewal. Located in Huntsville, Alabama. Frederick Ball Houses, also known as the Lane houses, built c. 1810. Federal period. Consist of one large house and two small townhouses. The large house is located to the north at 136 Habersham St. while the townhouses are numbers 138 and 142 Habersham St. in Savannah, Georgia. Includes historical reference photographs of other structures in the vicinity. Freeman House, built 1907, is neoclassical design mimickking the 18th-century Georgian style, also known as "Colonial Revival." Some Victorian style features as well. Servants cottages remain in the backyard. Located at 205 Lincoln St., Huntsville, Alabama. Gaines House, built c. 1900. Late-Victorian. Includes a storage shed that possibly functioned as a buggy house. Located at 132 Walker Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Gamble House, built c. 1830. Federal style. Located in southeast Limestone County, Alabama. Garconiere House, built c. 1839. Federal style. Located at 700 Mesopotamia St. in Eutaw, Alabama. George Spencer House, also known as the Spencer-Woodbridge House, built c. 1795. Originally a Georgian design. A rear brick addition made c. 1850s. Includes Victorian style aspects. Located in Warren Square at 22 Habersham St. in Savannah, Georgia. George Steele House, also known as Oak Place, built c. 1840. Greek Revival style. Located at 808 Maysville Rd., Huntsville, Alabama. Was built to be the family residence of George Steele, a prominent architect of early Huntsville. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974. Geron House, built 1926. Located at 509 Eustis Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Goldsmith-Donovan House, built c. 1887 by Oscar Goldsmith. Sold in 1890. Tower and porch added 1894-98. Rear addition added in 1997-8 renovation. Located at 506 Franklin Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Goodwin house. Built in 1914. Has a tin roof. Located at 13545 New Cut Road in Athens, Ala. Gothic Revival style church built circa 1851. Renovations included a limestone manse added around 1870. Located in Savannah, Ga. Greek Revival style structure. Built in 1834 as the University Club by architect William Nichols. Balustrade removed prior to 1934 rehabilitation. Located at 421 Queen City Ave in Tuscaloosa, Ala. Green Lawn, also known as the Otey House, built c. 1850 by William Madison Otey. Greek Revival style. Included a 20th century outbuilding that was demolished in 1988. The otey House was added to the Hational Register of Historic Places on January 19, 1982. Located on Meridian Pike approximately half a mile south of Meridianville, Alabama. Greensboro Presbyterian Church, built in 1859. The original spire and belfry was lost before restoration project after "Mission style Gothic" remodeling occurred in the 1920s. The restoration saw the return of a spire and tower. Located on Main St., Greensboro, Alabama. Grove-Sammons House, built c. 1830-1840. Federal period log dogtrot building with Victorian renovations. Located on the south side of Cherry Tree Rd. in New Hope, Alabama. Guntersville Presbyterian Church, also known as the First Presbyterian Church. Fellowship Hall built c. 1965, designed by Harvie Jones. Sanctuary interior restored in 1975 and exterior in 1986 by Jones and Herrin, Harvie Jones. Hagan House, built circa 1820 in Federal period style with additions in Victorian style. Expanded throughout the 19th century. Owned by Mr. Douglas Hagan, mayor of Mooresville. Located at 24937 Lauderdale St., Mooresville, Alabama. Harrison Brothers Hardware, built c. 1834, facade c. 1914, storefront in the early 20th century. Located at South Side Square 124 in Huntsville, Alabama. Hauer House, or the Leech-Hauer house, built c. 1830s. Greek Revival style. Originally located at 502 Governors Drive, Huntsville, Alabama. Demolished in 1986. Haws carriage house, built c. 1900. Remodeled for rental or servants' house and again by Jones and Herrin, Architects in 1976. Located at 606 Greene St., Huntsville, Alabama. Heineman House, built 1842 for Frederick Heineman. Greek revival style. Partially remodeled in the neo-colonial style in 1947. Located on Colombia Square and Habersham St. in Savannah, Georgia's Historic District. Henderson National Bank built around 1900 in a late Victorian style. Burned in 1947. Renovated by Paul Speake in a more stripped modern style. Located at 121 South Washinton St in Huntsville, Ala. Hendricks Corner Hardware and Furniture Store, built 1902, restored in 1995 by Athens computer firm, The Pinnacle Group Inc. The Hendricks building was mostly destroyed by a 1994 fire. Restored for office space. Designed in the Italiante style. Located at 122 W. Market St., Athens, Alabama. Henry Hoss House, built 1859-1860. Late Federal style with Greek Revival motifs. Springhouse built c. 1859, barn built c. 1914. Located on Blountville Rd. in Jonesborough, Tennessee. Henry Hoss's wife Anna Maria Sevier was the granddaughter of John Sevier, the Revolutionary War general and first governor of Tennessee, making the Henry Hoss House the home of one of Tennessee's important early families. Highway 72 Store, built c. 1800s near Athens, Alabama, and Gas Station in Collinsville, Alabama. Historic brick building, portions of which date from 1816. The building that became Harrison Brothers Hardware was subdivided and sold many times. It served as a general store, home, and warehouse for the Huntsville business community until it became a hardware store and later historic landmark. On the Courthouse Square in Huntsville, Ala. Historic District of Marion, Alabama includes the original home of The Alabama Baptist publication and Marion Courthouse Square which encompassed approximately 80 acres of the historic commercial and business area, residential architecture, and three historic church buildings. Historic home belonging to Jeremiah Clemens. The house includes a mixture of styles. First floor follows the early Federal style, later additions on the second floor are a mix of Italianate and Victorian. Built prior to 1831 with later additions from the 1870s. Located at 219 W. Clinton Ave in Huntsville, Ala. Historic photos of the freight depot, baggage building, and nearby culvert. Located at the train depot in Huntsville, Ala. Hollowell-Mastin House, built c. 1835. Located at 601 Franklin St., Huntsville, Alabama. Holmes East 700, built c. 1899 on same floorplan as Holmes East 702. Late Victorian style. Located at 700 Holmes Ave. East, Huntsville, Alabama. Holmes East 702, built c. 1899 on same floorplan as Holmes East 700. Late Victorian style. Located at 702 Holmes Ave. East, Huntsville, Alabama. Home and parlor style Federal house. Built circa 1821. Portions of the house survive in Eutaw. Demolished in 1982. Formerly near Greensboro, Ala. Home built by John Ford c. 1822. House built in the Federal style with original mantels and limestone foundation. The porches are from a later Victorian style. The wrought iron tie-bar on the side of the house served as the basis for later historic restorations of the Clay building and Constitution Hall Park. Located in Huntsville, Ala. Home built circa 1850s at 321 Barnard St. in Savannah, Ga. Home built for Abraham Sheftall circa 1818. Located near Habersham St. in Savannah, Ga. House at 104 Steele St., built c. 1870s. Originally located at 104 Steele St., Huntsville, Alabama. Demolished in 1991. House at 1100 Church Street. Built between 1880 and 1890. Former headquarters of City Coal Co. Demolished in 1998. Located in Huntsville, Ala. House at 403 Franklin St., built 1891. The architect for the house was H. D. Breeding. Bradley House, built c. 1820. Federal Style. Located at 405 Franklin St., Huntsville, Alabama. House at 413 Eustis Ave., built 1899. Located in Huntsville, Alabama. House at 419 McClung Ave., built c. 1867. Italiante style. Located in Huntsville, Alabama. House at 519 Randolph Ave., built c. 1824 by George Steele. Greek revival style with Victorian and 20th centiry additions. Located at 519 Randolph Ave. in Huntsville, AL. House at 702 Adams St. Gothic Revival style. Constructed in 1858. Renovated with a porch addition in 1967. House at 8 Cruse Alley. Constructed c. 1985 by J.C. Scrimpshire in Huntsville, Ala. House at Epes, Alabama, built c. 1870-1890. Structure moved to Livingston, Alabama in 1984. House built by Jones & Herrin, Architects in 1996. Located in Leighton, Alabama. House built circa 1812. Barn built 1919. Hand-chiseled limestone foundation. Dogtrot enclosed. Modern kitchen and bathroom added later. Off Winchester Road in Huntsville, Ala. House Located at 500 Governors Dr., Huntsville. Alabama. Built c. 1920s. Houses Houses and Log Barn in Gurley, all built c. 1870s. Located northeast of Gurley, Alabama. One of the houses was demolished c. 1985. Houston House, also known as the the Gilchrest-Houston-Rice house and the Rice House, built c. 1834. Located on Houston Ave. in Somerville, Alabama. Humphrey-Roger House, built in 1848 as a two-story rectangular home. Expanded in 1861, 1898, and 1913 to include a double front porch, a side porch and entrance, and a back wing addition. The house endured several preservation perils before being donated to the Constitution Village by Coca-Cola and restored by Jones & Herrin, Architects between 1992 and 1996. Located at 502 West Clinton St., Huntsville, Alabama. Humphries House, built in 1992 and designed by Harvie Jones. Located at 2883 Mountain Oak Road, Arab, Alabama. Hunstville-Madison County Chamber of Commerce Building, built in 1968. Located off Gallatin Street in Huntsville, Ala. Huntsville City Hall, designed by Harvie Jones and W.R. Dickson in 1964. Located at 308 Fountain Cir., Huntsville, Alabama. Huntsville Middle School, built about 1978. The school was designed to be built in a plot with many trees, but only requiring 2-3 to be removed. Located at 817 Adams Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Huntsville Utilities Building. Built in 1955. Located at 112 Spragins St. in Huntsville, Ala. Huntsville YMCA, built 1910 by Edgar Love. Located at 203 Greene St. N, Huntsville, Alabama. Hurricane Valley log house, built c. 1820. Federal Period. Includes a log barn and a shed. Located on Hurricane Valley Rd. in Madison County, Alabama. House built c. 1835-1850, dogtrot log house, and log house off Hurricane Creek Rd. in Madison County, Alabama. Includes Spencer Co., UAH Union Building, UDS Motorola Building, Building of Realtors, Paludan Residence, Huntsville Hilton Hotel, Covenant Presbyterian Church, and Drake Towers. Located in Huntsville, Alabama. Ingleside, built c. 1888. Includes a smokehouse. Located at 421 McClung Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Interior and roof canopy of the railway express building in Huntsville, Ala. Isbell-Beck House, built c. 1924 by contractor Jack Chitwood for John B. Isbell. Designed by Mrs. Isbell. Prairie style. Located at 206 2nd St., Fort Payne, Alabama. J. R. Kennamer Co. Store, built c. 1908. Located in Woodville, Alabama. Jackson County Courthouse, built 1868. Originally located on Railroad Ave. Moved near the Scottsboro Heritage Center in December 1986. James Meals Log House, or the Meals-Spencer House, built c. 1840 in N. Limestone County, Alabama and restored at Burritt Museum in Huntsville, Alabama. Jesse James was rumored to have been at the wedding of Margaret Meals, daughter of James Meals, and Thomas Alexander Adkins in 1876 before the payroll robbery in Muscle Shoals. Jeff Blacksmith shop. Located in Jeff, Alabama in Madison County. Demolished pre-1990. Jemison House, also known as the Jemison-Van de Graaff Mansion or the Friedman Library, built c. 1860. Italiante style. Built by Robert Jemison Jr., an Alabama and Confederate Senator, and designed by the firm of Samuel Sloan and John S. Stewart. Includes a servants house. Located at 1305 Greensboro Ave. in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Jewett Hall, originally built in 1840, destroyed by fire in 1888. Rebuilding began in 1889 and destroyed by second fire in 1947. Current building built in 1950. Colonial architecture, inspired by the Governor's Palace in Williamsburg, Virginia. Located at Judson College in Marion, Alabama. Jimmy Hays Senior residence. Built in the early nineteen hundreds. Includes a woodwork shop. Located at 425 McClung Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Joe Wheeler Plantation, also known as the Sherrod-Wheeler House, Cotton Garden, and Pond Spring. A group of thirteen buildings built in the range of c. 1818 to c. 1880: Early 1800s log center-hall barn. Early 20th century frame barn. 19th century log ice house. Servants' house. Pole barn built 20th century. Comissary built c. 1900. Log house built c. 1818. Log dogtrot house built c. 1820. Schoolhouse. The c. 1830 Sherrod House. General Joe Wheeler's post-Civil War period house built c. 1884. Family cemetery. Located in Lawrence County, Alabama. Joseph Wheeler was a Confederate Army General and seved in the Spanish-American War. Johnson Mahoney Building, Drugstore, and Central Cafe, built early 20th century. Located at the southeast corner of Jefferson and Clinton Sts. in Huntsville, Alabama. Demolished c. 1974. Jones House in the Madison Historic District. Built c. 1915 with a 1960 addition. Restored by Anthony Sansenberger. Located at 17 Front Street in Madison, Ala. Jordan Road House, also known as Flint River Place, built c. 1840-1850. Located at 1997 Jordan Rd. in Madison County, Alabama. Judson College Alumnae Auditorium and Hall, built in 1902. Located in Marion, Alabama. Karsner-Kennedy House, also known as The Flying Carpet shop, built c. 1825. Located in Florence, Alabama. Kaufman Building, built 1866. Located at 206 Eustis Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Originally a confectioner's shop owned by Kate and Peter Kaufman. Kaufman Building, built in 1866. Was originally the building for the Kaufman Store, now office building. Fa�ade and interior restoration completed in 1986. Located at 206 Eustis Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Kelly House, built c. 1825. Located on Kelly Cemetery Rd., Huntsville, Alabama. Demolished 1978. Kelly House, or the Bledsoe-Kelly House, was built in the 1850s. Victorian styles based on architectural evidence. Includes a two-room apartment built in the 1940s. Back porch has "washboard holders" detail on railing. Located north of Sylacauga, Alabama. Kelly Residence, built c. 1915. Remodeled in 1995-6. Located at 508 8th Ave., Decatur, Alabama. Koger House, built c. 1830. Federal Period. Located on Smithsonian and Rhodesville Roads west of Florence, Alabama. Late Victorian church at 601 Humes Ave. Built around the 1880s. Late Victorian house built around 1861. Renovated before 1913. Porch enclosed sometimes in the 1960s, rezoned as a chiropractor's office. Located at 510 Holmes Avenue in Huntsville, Ala. Late Victorian main house and antebellum service building. The service building includes Greek revival doors in the interior and early 19th century window hinges. Located at 302 Oakwood Avenue in Huntsville, Ala. Late Victorian style house located in Winchester, Tennessee. Restoration and addition began in 1990, partially completed in 1995. Laughinghouse-Phelps-Jones House, also known as Browning Place, built c. 1816. Federal style. Includes an outbuilding built in the late 1800s. Located on Pulaski Pike in Huntsville, Alabama. Laughinghouse-Sisco House, also known as Laughinghouse Place, built c. 1830. Federal style. Located north of Bell Factory Rd. in Madison County, Alabama. Lea House, also known as the Kramer residence and Spring Hill, built c. 1830. Greek Revival style with Palladian influence. Located at 302 Green St. in Marion, Alabama. Leckey House, or the Leckey-Mauldin house, built 1872-73 for Hugh C. Leckey, an Irish-born merchant. Single story home with Italiante style details. Renovated in 1991-1992 with additions made including a carport. Located at the southwest corner of AL 20 and Co. 48 (County Line), Leighton, Alabama. Leckey-Mauldin House, built c. 1850s. Italiante style. Located in Leighton, Alabama. Lee House, built c. 1841. Federal period. Originally located south of Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, Alabama. Moved c. 1975 to 104 Metaire Dr. in Madison, Alabama on Rainbow Mtn. Leigh Place, or Jones Residence, first floor was build in 1820s as a log house, second floor and extension built c. 1960. Jones and Herrin, Architects did proportional refinements in 1997. Includes a early 19th century servants house that was planned to be demolished by owner. Located in Leighton, Alabama. Leroy Pope House, built 1834. Greek Revival style. Located on McClung Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. General Leroy Pope Walker, the first Secretary of War of the Confederacy and the man who ordered fire on Fort Sumter in 1861, purchased the house in 1870 and lived there until his death. Lincoln Mills, built c. 1920s. Located on Meridian St. in Huntsville, Alabama. Burned c. 1978. Lincoln Mill Spanish style stucco homes built c. 1920s on Hoover St. and Abdington Rd. Lincoln Mill village houses on Meridian St., Holding Ave., Cottage St., and Kings Ave. Lincoln Street Presbyterian Church, also known as the First Presbyterian Church, built c. 1860. The architect was Adolphus Heiman. Located at 312 Lincoln St. in Huntsville, Alabama. Locust Hill, built 1823 and renovated 1865. Federal, Victorian, and early 20th century styles. Located in Tuscumbia, Alabama. Log House in Athens, Alabama. Greek Revival and Victorian style. Located on southwest corner of North Beaty St. and Wood St. Log House in Greenbrier, Alabama. Log House, Byers Nursery. Single-pen log house. Originally located off of North Memorial Parkway, Huntsville, Alabama. Dismantled in 1978 and given to Burritt Museum by David Byers. Lustron House, built in 1948. Pre-fab house made of steel panels and porcelain enamel. Located at 1105 Harrison Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Lyle Residence, built c. 1840-1870. Original structure a log house. Located northeast of Decatur, Alabama. Madison County Courthouse, built in 1811. 1914 building razed in 1964-65. Located in Huntsville, Alabama. Madison Hall, originally the Graduate Studies Building, was designed by Harvie Jones. Located at the University of Alabama in Huntsville. Madison House, built 1850s. Gothic Revival style. Originally located on Madison St. in Huntsville, Alabama. Moved c. 1980 to Hughes Rd. in Madison, Alabama. Magnolia Grove, built c. 1840. Greek Revival Style. Includes a slave house southwest and a well west of the main building. Located at 102 Hobson St., Greensboro, Alabama. Main house built c. 1902. Service building from 1820 to 1830 in the Federal Style. Garage from the 1920s. Located in Huntsville, Ala. Main house constructed in 1855. Dogtrot log cabin with limestone foundation. Greek revival sash and mantel. Moved in 1993 to 7 miles west of Athens, Ala. Main house constructed in 1873. Concrete block and back patio addition from 1982. Galvanized iron roof is modern. Vernacular component in a hanging quilting frame, typical of other 19th century homes in North Alabama. Located near Athens, Ala. Main house is a bungalow from the 1920s. The aluminum siding dates from the 1960s. The outbuilding is an antebellum kitchen done in the Greek Revival style, c. 1840-1860 in Huntsville, Ala. Marmaduke-Williams House, built in 1838, also known as the Owen-Williams-Brown House. Land was once owned by the University of Alabama. Built by Thomas Owens shortly after purchasing the land. Owens moved to Aberdeen, Mississippi upon the purchase of a plantation and this house was occupied by his in-laws, the Marmaduke Williams. During the renovation project (1994-1997) in 1996, the house was the victim of arson and destroyed the interior. A previous fire 1992 had already caused considerable damage. Located at 907 17th Ave., Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Maroney House, built c. 1850s or 1870s. Italiante style. Located at 740 Lynchburg Highway in Mulberry, Tennessee. Mary Bibb mausoleum, located in Maple Hill Cemetery in Huntsville, Alabama. The architect for the Greek Revival style tomb was George Steele. Built c. 1835. Masonic Hall, built c. 1850s. Moved and renovated c. 1990. Located in Ashville, Alabama. Mastin-Batson House, built c. 1815-1830. Federal, Greek Revival, and Italianate styles. Includes slave quarters built c. 1819. Located at 516 Franklin St., Huntsville, Alabama. Mayhew Cottage, built in 1889, nextdoor to the Mayhew House. The cottage was built for the family's son. Located at 506 Eustis Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Maysville Blacksmith shop. Located on Richard H. Gilliam farm in Maysville, Alabama in northeast Madison County. McCartney-Bone House, also known as the Bone-Wilbourne House, built c. 1820s. Federal Period. There is a c. 1870 dentist office in the backyard, as well as a well-house, barn, and cemetery. Located at 1162 Hurricane Creek Rd. in Maysville, Alabama. McDonald Farm Buildings, built c. 1890-1970. Composed of 13 buildings, including a house built c. 1920s, a house built 1959, a pole-barn built c. 1920-50, and a chicken house and log playhouse built 1974. Located northwest of Old Madison Pike in Huntsville, Alabama. McDowell House, also known as the McDowell-Chase-Falt Home and the backwards house, built in 1848 by William McDowell. Federal Period. Located at 517 Adams St., Huntsville, Alabama. This house was built reversed from its original plans. It was occupied by Union General "Old Stars" Mitchel during the Civil War. McWilliams Log House, built c. 1830-1850. Located in north of Athens in Limestone County, Alabama. Methodist Church, founded by the Moore family in the 1880s. Additional acreage was included for a cemetery. Located in Heiberger, Alabama. Miscellaneous building exteriors. Miscellaneous Jones & Herrin, Architects projects including Dr. Rick and Lisa Roberts Residence at 10 Cruse Alley (completed in 1995), Beck Residence (1985) at 502 Eustis Ave., an office remodel (1969) at 215 Randolph St., and the G.W. Jones Office (1980 and 1993-4) at 303 Franklin St., Huntsville, Alabama. Mitchell House, or the Mitchen-Redd House, built in the 1830s. Once known as the Jonesboro Place. Plantation style cottage. Located at 747 N. Wood Ave., Florence, Alabama. Monroe Business Equipment. Front remodeled 1984. Located at 116 South Jefferson St., Huntsville, Alabama. Monte Sano Fire Station. Designed 1956 by Harvie Jones, built 1957 by W. R. Dickson. Miesian influenced design. Located on the east side of Monte Sano Blvd. Demolished 1992 for a larger station. City Hall Public Safety Building, built 1963-1964, designed by Harvie Jones and built by W. R. Dickson. Located in Huntsville, Alabama. Moody Brick House, built c. 1860, rebuilt after 1888 fire. Federal Period. Includes a family cemetery. Located near Hollywood, Alabama. Moore House, built c. 1900. Late Victorian period. Located at 111 Steele St., Huntsville, Alabama. The house was going to be moved to the Huntsville Depot Museum, but the then-head of the City Community Development Office intervened and the house was demolished in 1982. Morgan House, built c. 1850. Located in Scottsboro, Alabama. Demolished 1988. Morley House, Located at 513 Franklin St., Huntsville. Alabama. Built c. 1890. Victorian style. Musgrove Residence, built in 1994 by Jones and Herrin, Architects. Located at 4220 Jackson Road, Florence, Alabama. Myrtle Hall, or Kirkwood, built c. 1830. Federal Style. Located south of Eutaw, Alabama. New Hope High School, built in the early twentieth century (c. 1920). Despite Harvie Jones' attempt to demonstrate the benefit of renovation, funds were unable to be raised and the school is demolished in 1975. Located in New Hope, Alabama. New Market United Methodist Church, construction begun 1920, finished 1926. Colonial Revival style. The original builder was Frank Estes, but he did not complete the building. Influenced by Monticelllo in Virginia and by Palladian Villa Rotunda architecture. Located at 310 Hurricane Road, New Market, Alabama. The church was added to the National Register of Historic Places on June 14, 1990. New Market, Alabama. Criner House, Federal style built c. 1830 and located northeast of New Market, Alabama. The house was dismantled c. 1950 by H. C. Jones Sr. and its parts used in H. C. Jones Jr.'s residence on Winchester Rd. south of New Market, Alabama. Harvie Jones is a descendent of Isaac Criner, who arrived in Madison County a few months before John Hunt in 1804 or 1805. Bank building built c. 1928, P. O. Box Office built in the late 1800s, and a Victorian style house built c. 1870-1880 on New Market Rd. and Winchester Rd. Late Gothic Revival style Presbyterian Church built c. 1888 and located at 1723 New Market Rd. The church was built by Lem Teague and added to the National Register of Historic places on August 25, 1988. McCaleb House, Queen Anne style built in the late 1800s on Deposit Rd. and demolished 1978. Newman-Boyd-Cruse House, built late 1800s. Late Victorian Style. Located on East Clinton Ave. in Huntsville, Alabama. North Georgia. Includes the Lustrat House, the Georgia Power Company building, and various stores. Greek Revival style building, built c. 1830-1850 located in Crawfordsville, Georgia. Sketches include the rough locations of North Georgia and University of Georgia campus buildings. Abandoned building in Town Square, built c. 1850s. North Jefferson St., Huntsville, Alabama. North Side Square Southern Furniture store, built c. 1870, Italiante style, renovated c. 1969. North Side Square building, built c. 1870, renovated 1969. Building on northwest corner of Square, built in the early 1800s, renovated c. 1967. Located in Huntsville, Alabama. North Washington Street. Everett Building, built 1899. Apartments on second floor of the Everett Building, built c. 1914. Stegall Hotel, built 1861, rebuilt after fire in 1932. Yarbrough hotel, built c. 1920s, demolished 1981-1982. Dunnavant's Building, remodeled 1983. Heritage Club building in 1984. Twickenham Hotel, demolished c. 1973. Located in Huntsville, Alabama. Notes and photographs related to the renovation of the WMU dorm at Judson College in Marion, Ala. Oaklawn, also known as the Robinson-Dilworth house, built c. 1830-1840. Greek revival style. Located at 2709 Meridian St., Huntsville, Alabama. The land around Oaklawn was considered for a veterans hospital, though there was some dispute around the costruction due to the idea that there may have been an Indian burial ground or a Confederate hospital there in the past. Oakwood College East Hall, built 1899. Late-Victorian style. Located at 7000 Adventist Blvd., Huntsvile, Alabama. Office building designed by the firm of Jones & Herrin in 1988. Located at 47 Slaughter Rd in Madison, Ala. Office building for Pepper Insurance, built 1915-20. Renovated in 1993. Has original stamped metal ceilings and skylights. Located at 120 Marion St., Athens, Alabama. Office for Jones & Herrin, Architects, built early 20th century. Renovated in 1976 and again in 1985. Original 1920s metal stamped ceiling remains. Located at 104 S. Jefferson St., Huntsville, Alabama. Old Salem, North Carolina. Includes photographs of a kitchen, a barn interior, fences, streets, and walking paths in Old Salem. Includes the outside of the Christoph Vogler House, built 1797, and the John Vogler House-Silversmith and Clock Makers Shop, built 1819. Old State Bank, built 1832 by architect George Steele. The building housed the bank and second floor living quarters for banking residence as required by early law. Built in Greek Revival styles. Used as a hospital during the Battle of Decatur. Restored once in the 1930s. Located on Bank St., Decatur, Alabama. Old Town Historic District. Queen Anne Cottage style house on East Holmes, built post-1871. Two Spanish style houses on Walker Ave. built c. 1920. House on East Holmes, built post-1871. House on Clinton Ave. E built post-1871. House on Steele St., built pre-1861. Four once-identical Queen Anne style houses on East Clinton Ave. Second Empire style house on East Holmes, built c. 1880s. Renaissance Revival and Colonial Revival style house on East Holmes, built c. 1900s. Queen Anne style house and A.J. Downing Gothic Style house on Walker Ave., and two Queen Anne style houses on East Holmes, all built post-1871. Greek Revival style house on Calhoun St., built c. 1855. Queen Anne style house of an identical pair of houses on East Holmes, built post-1871. Remodeled Federal Period house with Greek Revival aspects on East Holmes, built pre-1861. Federal style house on Calhoun St., built pre-1850. Two-room house on East Holmes, built c. 1830. Adjoining Swiss and English bungalow style houses, built c. 1914. Pleasants House, Second Empire style on Walker Ave, built c. 1889. Shingle style bungalow on East Holmes, built c. 1907. Four houses on Walker Ave. Glenn House, built 1891 and located at 117 Walker Ave. Three Victorian style houses on East Holmes with bungalow remodels. Reverse twin houses at 801 and 805 East Clinton Ave. Oldfield Towry House, built c. 1885. Built in a symmetrical Victorian style. Located at 14202 Meridian Pike, Hazel Green, Alabama. Originally built as a Christian Science Temple circa 1920s. Renovated and repurposed as the Fantasy Playhouse in the 1970s. Located at the corner of White St. and Wells Ave in Huntsville, Ala. Outbuilding at the c. 1838 McClung House. Built c. 1900, porch c. 1978-1980. Demolished by owner in 1988 without permission of the Huntsville Historic Preservation Committee. Parmer-Murrel-Payne House, built c. 1830. Federal period "I" type house. Originally located on Cloverfield Rd. Moved and restored 1989-1990. Located near Pintlala in Montgomery County, Alabama. Paul Cottage, built c. 1850s. Located at 710 Adams St., Huntsville, Alabama. Peck House, built by John Brown in 1855. Includes a second addition for family to move in to help Brown's widow after his death in 1860. Victorian style porch. Located in Cole Springs, Alabama. Photo of a home located at 507 Franklin Ave in Huntsville Ala. Photographs of residences near downtown Huntsville, Alabama. Includes a Williams St. fence, built ca. 1940 and demolished in 1980; Dutch Colonial residence on Franklin St., south of Cruse Alley, for which Jones and Herrin designed a rear addition in 1984; and residences on Church St. near the depot, including the Andrew Jackson Downing House. Photos and floorplan of the Laughinghouse-Sisco House built c. 1830. The kitchen and bath date from the 1940s. Located at 765 Bell Factory Road in Huntsville, Ala. Photos and sketches of the C&G Raildroad roundhouse. Included are the engine turn table and freight cranes. Located in Columbus, Miss. Photos of a home formerly located across from the Russel Erskine Hotel in downtown Huntsville, Ala. Photos of a home formerly located at 307 Randolph Ave in Huntsville, Ala. Photos of a home in Savannah, Ga. Photos of a home located at 413 Randolph Ave in Huntsville, Ala. Photos of a home. Later renovated as the East Huntsville Baptist Church. Located at 808 Maysville Rd. in Huntsville, Ala. Photos of street scenes used for consultancy work around walking and lanscape improvements in Savannah, Ga. Photos of the 1829 Alabama Capitol Building. Burned in 1923. Located in Tuscaloosa, Ala. Photos of the 1856 Freight Depot located in Huntsville, Ala. Photos of the engine turntable, coal elevators, and mechanic shops at the Southern Railroad facility in Birmingham, Ala. Photos of the engine turntable, track, and structural details as the L&N roundhouse in Birmingham, Ala. Photos of the old Standard Oil and L&L service station in Huntsville, Ala. Photos of this house were taken in 1981. They show an outbuilding as well as the large, two story frame main house. In interior contains multiple detailed mantles, railings, and other unique features. Located at 604 Adams St., Huntsville, Alabama. Pope House, also known as the Leroy Pope-Watts House and the Patton-Echols-Spragins-Watts House, built c. 1814. Originally Federal style. Renovated by George Steele c. 1848 to be a combination of Federal and Greek Revival styles. North wing added c. 1920s. Located at 403 Echols Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. LeRoy Pope, the first owner of the house, purchased a large tract of land, including Huntsville, and became an important part of Huntsville's political, economic, and cultural development. Pope hosted a dinner on the lawn of his house to honor General Andrew Jackson and his company when they passed through the area after the Battle of Horse Shoe Bend. The University of Alabama in Huntsville once leased this building to house its university presidents. Pope's Tavern, built c. 1830 by Leroy Pope. Federal style. Located in Florence, Alabama. Poplar Ridge School, built c. 1870s. Classical Revival style with Victorian style addition. Located in Madison County, Alabama. Post Office, built 1936. Located at 101 Clinton East, Huntsville, Alabama. Burned 1960s. Later became the Federal Courthouse. Prairie Ave. House, built c. 1860. Late Greek Revival style with late Victorian additions. Located on Prairie Ave. in Eutaw in Greene County. Demolished by owner in 1991. Presbyterian church built in 1869. With classrooms added in the 1940s and a Fellowship Hall from the late 1950s. Located at 201 North Randolph in Eufaula, Ala. President's House, built c. 1849, designed by George Steele. Belonged to the President of Huntsville Female College until 1895. Located at 413 Randolph Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Restored 1981. Pride Thompson Law Office was renovated by Jones & Herrin, Architects in 1983. Located in Court House Square in Tuscumbia, Alabama. Pride Tompkins Law Office, originally the Godley House. Built in the 1820s. Federal Period brick one-story home with additions and a frame outbuilding. Located at 106 W 3rd St., Tuscumbia, Alabama. Proctor House, built c. 1880. Classic Revival style. Remodeled c. 1910. Located in Scottsboro, Alabama. Used as the Scottsboro-Jackson County Heritage Center. Prospect Tennessee House, built c. 1850s. Federal style. Located in Prospect, Tennessee. Public Inn, built c. 1818 at the northeast corner of Madison and Williams and moved to current site in November 1926. Opened to the public on October 29, 1819 by William E. Phillips. There was an addition in 1832. Built in the "Neo-Classical" style with English influences. Another addition to the rear of the houses was built in 1927 after it was moved. Restoration was completed in 1991. Located at 205 Williams Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Pulaski Square Infill House, also known as the New Mills Lane House. Greek Revival style. Located in Pulaski Square in Savannah, Georgia. Built on the lot of what once was a c. 1920s auto shop. Purdom House, Located at 409 Randolph St., Huntsville. Alabama. Built in the early 19th century, probably by the architect Edgar Love. Additions by George Steele. Federal Period. Quietdale, built c. 1840-1850s. Federal style shape, Greek Revival style interior details, and Italiante porches. Includes a servants building, carriage house, and barn. Located in Huntsville, Alabama. Railroad depot completed in 1872 in the Italianate style. Originally billed as the Vicksburg and Brunswick Depot, in 1883, the Eufaula and Clayton Railroad purchased the building. Located on S. Randolph Street in Eufaula, Ala. Ray Jones Residence in Jones Valley, built c. 1965 by W.R. Dickson. Additions were built in 1993 by Jones & Herrin, Architects. Located at 5005 Garth Rd., Huntsville, Alabama. Renovation photos of a home located at 132 Walker Ave in Huntsville, Ala. Rhett-Pipes House, built c. 1820s. Federal style. Located at 621 Franklin St., Huntsville, Alabama. Rhoades House, built 1995. 17th century style. Located at 133 Walker Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Rhodesville log cabin. Federal Period log house in Rhodesville, Alabama. Rick Roberts Residence, built in 1995 by Jones and Herrin, Architects. Includes a terrace and courtyard. Located at 10 Cruse Alley, Huntsville, Alabama. Ridley Hall was completed in 1886. In the 1950s, it was converted into seven classrooms. Restoration in 1985 saw it returned to its original floorplan. Located at 210 Eustis Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Row houses built circa 1810-1820. Partial renovations in the 1850s. Located at 25-27 Lincoln St. in Savannah, Ga. Rowhouse built in 1856 for Isaac Laroche. Portico and stairs added later. Located at 210 W. Harris in Savannah, Ga. Ruins of 1820s plantation house at the Forks of the Cypress. Ruins consists of 23 columns made onsite by slave labor. Off Jackson Road in Lauderdale County, Ala. Saddlebag style cabin. Limestone chimney in the center. Built c. 1820-1860 near Big Cove in Madison County, Ala. Saddlebag style slave cabin c. 1820s. Only the chimney remained by 1998. Off Jackson Road in Lauderdale County, Ala. Saunders Hall, also known as the Goode-Hall House, built c. 1830s by Turner Saunders. Jeffersonian Classic style with Palladian influence. Located north of Town Creek in Lawrence County, Alabama. Schiffman Building, built in 1845 and remodeled in 1895. Stone details and interior mostly original. Located at 205 East Side Square, Huntsville, Alabama. Second floor of the historic train depot. The second floor featured a variety of fireplaces and stove components. Preservationists removed the northeastern wall during museum prepartions. There is a paw print on a brick at the back of one of the chimneys. Located in Huntsville, Ala. Several photos of a home that failed to fill out the National Register of Historic Places paperwork in Athens, Ala. Shackelford-McMahon House, also known as the Wilson residence, built c. 1828 by Joseph Trotter. Federal style with Victorian style kitchen addition. Located at 833 Hamilton St. in Courtland, Alabama. Sharp Cabin, built c. 1830. Federal Period log house. Built either by Samuel Gray or Adrian Sharp of Petersburg, Virginia. Originaly located on Brush Creek Rd. in northwest Lauderdale County, Alabama, moved to Savannah Rd. near Florence, Alabama in 1991. Sheppard House, built 1828. Federal style. Located at 505 Holmes Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Siloam Baptist Church, built in 1849. Known for being in original condition though the building had been in continuous use for 146 years. The church was founded in 1822. Chapel woodwork presumed to be from the 1920s. Located at 505 Washington St., Marion, Alabama. Smith Academy, or the Davis Home, was built in 1853. A Home for Dr. Carlos G. Smith, former president of the University of Alabama, it was utilized as a school as well. Built in Greek Revival styles, Italianate architectural additions were made between 1861 and 1871. Located at 706 Adams St., Huntsville, Alabama. Smith-Dark House, built c. 1840-1850. Late Federal or Greek Revival style with a pre-1861 Italianate south wing. Located at 704 Adams St., Huntsville, Alabama. Smith-William Cabin, built in 1830. Cabin was moved and rebuilt in 1868 to Big Cove, and again in the 1970s to the Burritt Museum. Everything except the logs are post 1970 materials. Rebuilt again in 1990-1991 by Jones & Herrin, Architects. Located on Williams Road on Monte Sano, Huntsville, Alabama. Somerville Courthouse, built c. 1837. Federal Style. Located in Somerville, Alabama. The first permanent courthouse in Morgan County, Alabama. South Side Square Alley and Jefferson West Alley. Southall Building. Located in Florence, Alabama. St. Mary's Catholic School, built c. 1820-1840 . Combination of Federal, Greek Revival, and Mission Revival styles due to renovations c. 1835-50, 1922, and 1950. Located on Holmes Avenue East, Huntsville, Alabama. Originally a residence before its expansion. Ben P. Hunt, grandson of John Hunt, the first settler of Huntsville for which the town was named, lived here around the turn of the 20th century. St. Michael's and All Angels Episcopal Church, built c. 1888 by John Ward Noble. Selected as a state historical site. Preservation included stain glass windows, interior, exterior, and other various details on the property. Located at 1000 W. 18th St., Anniston, Alabama. Stapp Residence, built c. 1850s. Located at the northeast corner of Franklin and Williams in Huntsville, Alabama. Stone arch railroad Bridge, built 1873, presumably built from local limestone. Located at Beaverdam Creek near AL 20, Greenbriar, Alabama. Sublett Cabin, built c. 1842. Log house. Located on Moontown Rd. in Madison County, Alabama. Sumpter House, built c. 1894. Located in Pulaski, Tennessee. Sunnyside, also known as Hampton House, the Hampton Log Home, or Green Lawn, built c. 1811. Federal style with Victoran and Greek Revival style aspects. Included a separate kitchen, spring house, and slave quarters. Located in Huntsville, Alabama. Burned at request of owner on October 20, 1981. Temple B'nai Shalom, built 1898. Architect said to be Edgar Love or R.H. Hunt. Romanesque inspired and Baroque inspired styles. Located on the southeast corner of Lincoln St. and East Clinton Ave. in Huntsville, Alabama. The "Southerland Building", built in 1968. Addition was built in 1990. Located at 806 Governors Dr., Huntsville, Alabama. The Bandstand in the town square was designed and built by Jones & Herrin, Architects in 1994. Consists of the stand and a gazebo. Located in Courtland, Alabama. The Blevins-Mastin house, built c. 1835 by John Blevins. Greek revival plantation house. The house was eventually owned by the Church of Christ and used as a church by removing the entrance hall. Original walls and doors were replaced when converted back to a house. The church offered the house to Alabama Constitutional Village in 1994 and relocated to Williams and Fountain Circle, Huntsville. Originally at 3705 N. Parkway, Huntsville, Alabama. The Cox-White-Faber House, built c. 1836 in the Federal style by architect George Steele. At one time had several service buildings that contained the kitchen, servants' quarters, the stable, and more. Only one large service building remains, presumed to be the smokehouse. The house underwent expansions in 1844 and again a few years later. A Greek Revival trim was added in the mid-1800s. Located at 312 White St., Huntsville, Alabama. The Gurley Hotel was built in the 1870s. It was opened for business in the 1880s by Captain Frank Gurley, Confederate veteran. Located in Gurley, Alabama. The Houston House, built c. 1830. Home of George Smith Houston, elected governor in 1874. Located on West St., Athens, Alabama. The Hundley House, built 1900. Remodeled four times before it was bought in 1994 and restored. It has been used as a movie set and a funeral parlor before restoration. Located at 401 Madison St., Huntsville, Alabama. The Lane-Gwathney House, built in 1822. Federal Period house. Improved twice during the nineteenth century in 1852 and 1883. During the early 20th century, many houses along Broughton St. were either demolished or jacked up for retail spaces to be built underneath. The house/rooms above were rented during WWII. Located at 410 E. Broughton St., Savannah, Georgia. The Lewis-Clay-Anderson home, built in 1830. Federal Period style. Includes photos of the servants quarters and a family tree. Also included a female seminary in the nineteen hundreds. West wing as well as an outbuilding was demolished. Previous owner stated that the "Huntsville Democrat" paper was published in the outbuilding. Located at 513 Eustis Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. The McMurtrie Residence, built c. 1850s. Moved from Rehobeth, Alabama, to Little Cove Road, Huntsville, Alabama c. 1990. The Miller House, also known as the Miller-Harrison-Laseter House, built in 1857, is a two-story house build in the shape of a Maltese Cross with three entrances and three porches. Utilizes Gothic architectural details. Located at 1601 Alaca Place, Tuscaloosa, Alabama. The north side of West Holmes Avenue circa 1966 in Huntsville, Ala. The Rosenbaum House, built in 1940 by architect Frank Lloyd Wright for Stanley and Mildred Rosenbaum as newlyweds. Located in Florence, Alabama. These houses contain similar details. The house at 427 Eustis Ave (bottom) was owned by Pat Graves in 1995 and was originally built in the late Victorian era. The house at 423 Eustis Ave. (top) had the main floor built in 1888 and the second story added in 1946. It was known as the Harris House. Located on Eustis Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Third floor of the historic train depot. Located in Huntsville, Ala. This house was built c. 1840 and had an addition built in 1890. Parts of the home are late-Federal to early Greek Revival and other parts are late Victorian. The house was bought and demolished in 1998 by Dr. Aust after easily fixable "dry rot" was found in parts of the wood. Located at 715 Adams St., Huntsville, Alabama. Thomas-McCrary home. Brick. Built in several sections. The two-story core is the original 1824 home, with the single story additions dating from 1870. Includes a wooden smokehouse and commissary as outbuildings. Located at 356 McVille Lane in New Market, Ala. Times Building, built c. 1929. Located at 228 Holmes Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Originally planned to have eleven floors, a twelfth floor was added when it was revealed that the Russel Erksine Hotel would have twelve floors. Tommy Hutchers building. First Presbyterian Church. First Alabama Bank. Schiffman building, built 1840s, facade 1880s, located at 231 East Side Square. May and Cooney Dry Goods Store, built 1914, located at 205 East Side Square. Located in Huntsville, Alabama. Transfer house and octagonal structure at the train depot in Huntsville, Ala. Trinity Episcopal Church, built 1894. Late Gothic Revival style. Located in Florence, Alabama. Twickenham Church of Christ, built 1980. Church planned to build a large, pre-fab metal gym as of February 1995. Located at 7500 Whitesburg Dr., Huntsville, Alabama. UAH Chapel, also known as Union Chapel Church and UAH Art Gallery, built c. 1820-1840. Greek Revival style. Originally located 1/2 mile west of Brier Fork Creek on Grimwood Rd. in Hazel Green, Alabama. Moved to UAH campus in 1974. University of Montevallo. Peterson Hall, built 1914. Old Art Annex, turn-of-the-century Victorian style house. Located in Montevallo, Alabama. Urguhart Log House, built c. 1813. Federal style. Dogtrot house. Barn built c. 1926. Located at 8024 Pulaski Pike, Toney, Alabama. Added to the National Register of Historic Places on February 13, 1992. Van Valkenburg House, built c. 1904. Located at 501 Franklin St., Huntsville, Alabama. Van Valkenburgh House, or the Steamboat Gothic House, built c. 1885. Remodeled c. 1921-1928. Originally located between Williams Ave. and Gates Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Moved to Lowe Ave. c. 1975. Used 1978-1987 by the Madison County Federation of Women's Clubs. Various rural buildings. Includes: A pre-1860 limestone chimney in south Gurley, Alabama; Solomon DeBow house, built c. 1840 on McMullen Rd. near Gurley, Alabama; A pre-Civil War house converted to a barn on McMullen Rd. near Gurley, Alabama; A 1 and a half story house in Gurley, Alabama; A store and a barn from New Hope, Alabama; Barns and tralers in in Big Cove, Alabama; Empty stores in New Hope, Alabama; An empty store, a cattle shed, and barns in Jeff, Alabama; A Victorian house north of Jeff, Alabama; The Chase Nursery Barn in Chase, Alabama; Barns and houses near Athens, Alabama. Various Structures in Mooresville, Alabama in Limestone County. Includes: A walking tour pamphlet for Historic Mooresville which maps and shows images and information on 33 different structures, such as the c. 1826 Campbell-Woodruff Home; news articles on the Aunt Polly House; the Zietler-Hill House, built 1927-1945, Federal Period; the Hurn-Thach House, built c. 1825 with a c. 1850 addition, Federal Revival style, Andrew Jackson may have rented a room there; the Leftwich-Harris House, built c. 1826; the Scott House, built pre-1820; the Stagecoach Inn and Tavern, also known as the Old Tavern, built c. 1825, Federal Period; the Campbell-Woodruff House built c. 1826; various stores from the mid to late 1800s; the Zeitler-McCrary House, built c. 1826; the Union Church, built 1839; Simmons Cottage, built c. 1890; the outbuildings of various houses; the Mooresville post office, built c. 1850-1870; the Wilmer residence guest house, built c. 1970 by Allison Bailey; the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, or the Brick Church, built c. 1839. Various Twickenham houses include the 1830 Purham House (409 Randolph Ave.), Covenant Presbyterian Church and houses on South Lincoln St., Masonic Temple, First Methodist Church, Mayhew House (512 Eustis Ave.), Fenyn House (504 Eustis Ave.), 1823 Mastin House, Moore-Rhett House (603 Adams St.). Vaughan House, built c. 1840. Raised Creole Cottage type house with a Victorian addition. Located in Eutaw, Alabama. Also includes a photograph of Kirkwood in Eutaw, Alabama. Vaughn-Stacy-Irwin House, built 1858. The property was bought by Vaughn in 1857. Classical Revival mid-19th century style, includes inspiration from Greek Revival, Palladian, and Italianate styles as well. A back addition was added in the late 19th century. Includes a 1880-1890 gazebo. Located at 111 Sam Davis Ave., Pulaski, Tennessee. Victorian porches. Daniel T. Harrison house, built 1893, at 403 White St. House at White St. off Randolph and Wells Aves. 1899 Halsey House at 308 Eustis Ave. House at 502 Randolph Ave. Mayhew house, built c. 1843, at 512 Eustis Ave. House, built c. 1880s, at 419 Eustis Ave. All houses located in Huntsville, Alabama. W. B. Davis Hosiery Mill, also known as the Alabama Builders' Hardware Manufacturing Company and Bonnie Mills, built c. 1889. Colonial Revival style. Located at 204 8th St. NE in Fort Payne, Alabama. Placed on National Register of Historic Places in the mid 1980s. This mill was important for revival of industrial development in Fort Payne, particularly in hosiery and sock manufacturing. At one point the town earned the title of "Sock Capitol of the World." W.C. Handy Log House and Museum, built in the early 19th century. Home of W.C. Handy, famous blues composer born in 1873. Popular compositions such as "St. Louis Woman" and "Bride St. Blues" were composed here. It was rebuilt in the 1960s on the current site with the addition of the museum. Only the logs of the actual house remain authentic from when W.C. Handy owned the house. Located in Florence, Alabama. Walnut Grove Cumberland Presbyterian Church, built c. 1868. The previous building was burned by Northerners. Includes an outbuilding, Fellowship Hall. Located at 729 Cedar Point Road, New Hope, Alabama. Ward House, built c. 1858. Downing style. Located at 424 McClung Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Washington-Pryor House, also known as Flower Hill Farm, built c. 1846. Gothic and Victorian styles. Located near Tanner in Limestone County. West face of buildings on the west side of the Square, buildings built c. 1830s in the Victorian style, demolished in the 1960s. East Clinton Street. Located in Huntsville, Alabama. Wheeler Grove Baptist Church, built c. 1885-1900. Located approximately seventeen miles west of Decatur. White-Turner-Sanford House, or the Lewis-Sanford Home, built 1827 by James White. Federal Style with a two-story Italianate Revival addition. Located at 601 Madison St., Huntsville, Alabama. The first owner to live in the house for a significant amount of time was John H. Lewis, mayor of Huntsville from 1826 to 1828 and legal practitioner. Whitman-Cobb House, built c. 1861. Combination of Victorian, Greek Revival, and Adamesque styles. Located on Winchester Rd., New Market, Alabama. Wiley Thompson House, also known as Lowe House, built c. 1850s. Most likely Greek Revival style. Located on 483 Jack Thomas Rd., Toney, Alabama. William Cooper House, built c. 1820. Located at 410 East 6th St., Tuscumbia, Alabama. Willliam Cooper, an early owner of the home, was a lawyer for the Chickasaw tribe who lived in present day Cherokee, Alabama. William E. Spotwood House, built in the early 1800s. Federal Period house with additions. The house was demolished, sometime after 1871. The house reconstruction notes here were mostly created through information found among the 1840 Clay Family Papers. Located at 111 Greene St., Huntsville, Alabama. William Lanford house, built c. 1850, is a Greek Revival style two-story home. Includes a cantilevered balcony and some Federal Period style architectural details. The house became endangered during the construction of Research Park West. Located at 7400 Old Madison Pike, Huntsville, Alabama. William Pepper Office, built c. 1900. Restored by Jones & Herrin, Architects in 1994. Located at 118 Marion St., Athens, Alabama. William Pepper Residence, built by Jones & Herrin, Architects in 1994. Designed in 1992. Located at 418 E. Washington St., Athens, Alabama. William Pepper Residence, built by Jones & Herrin, Architects in 1994. Located at 418 E. Washington St., Athens, Alabama. Winchester Road 2612, built c. 1840-1850. Federal style with Greek Revival interior components. Includes a barn and a corncrib. Located at the intersection of Winchester Rd. and Blue Spring Rd. in Huntsville, Alabama. Demolished c. 1977. Winston-Orgain House, built 1819. Federal style. Located at 401 Lincoln St., Huntsville, Alabama. The album documents the house from about 1983 to 1995, and it includes articles on the history of the house as well as drawings and floor plans. Woodside, built c. 1840s. Greek Revival and Victorian styles. Located in Belle Mina, Alabama. Yeatman House, built c. 1861. Federal style with Greek Revival additions. Located at 528 Adams St., Huntsville, Alabama. Zietler-McCrary House, build c. 1826, in the Federal style. Includes an outside kitchen and smokehouse. Builder and original occupants are unknown. A schoolhouse located in the corner of the yard was added onto the back of the house in the 1860s. Located at 4845 High St., Mooresville, Alabama.