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.
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.
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.
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.
Laughinghouse-Sisco House, also known as Laughinghouse Place, built c. 1830. Federal style. Located north of Bell Factory Rd. in Madison County, 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.