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Architecture notebook 6: Feeney-Barber House, at 414 Randolph Ave., Huntsville, Ala.
Feeney-Barber House, built c. 1825-1832. Federal Style. Located at 414 Randolph Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. Restored 1975. -
Architecture notebook 6: Dowdell House, or Boxwood, at 409 E. North St., Talladega, Ala.
Dowdell House, or Boxwood, built c. 1850s. Gothic Revival. Located at 406 E. North St., Talladega, Alabama. -
Architecture notebook 6: House and log barn near Gurley, Ala.
Houses and Log Barn in Gurley, all built c. 1870s. Located northeast of Gurley, Alabama. One of the houses was demolished c. 1985. -
Architecture notebook 7: Urguhart Log House, Toney, Ala.
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. -
Architecture notebook 7: White-Turner-Sanford House, or the Lewis-Sanford Home, at 601 Madison St., Huntsville, Ala.
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. -
Architecture notebook 7: Clifton Place, on Annie Wade Rd. near Pulaski, Tenn.
Clifton Place, built c. 1812. Federal and Greek Revival styles. Located on Annie Wade Road, approximately seven miles northwest of Pulaski, Tennessee. -
Architecture notebook 7: Myrtle Hall, or Kirkwood, near Eutaw, Ala.
Myrtle Hall, or Kirkwood, built c. 1830. Federal Style. Located south of Eutaw, Alabama. -
Architecture notebook 10: McDonald Farm Buildings, Huntsville, Ala.
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. -
Architecture notebook 10: Coleman-Johnson-House, or Westmoreland, Athens, Ala.
Coleman-Jones House, or Westmoreland, built 1855. Porch addition and cupola removal 20th century. Italianate and Federal styles. Located in Athens, Alabama. -
Architecture notebook 10: Cotton Row, downtown Huntsville, Ala.
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.