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Architecture notebook 1: Winston-Orgain House, Huntsville, Ala.
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. -
Architecture notebook 1: Chase Nursery Barn, near Huntsville, Ala.
Chase Nursery Barn, built c. 1915. Located near Moores Mill Road near Huntsville, Alabama. -
Architecture notebook 6: St. Mary's Catholic School, Huntsville, Ala.
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. -
Architecture notebook 6: President's House, Huntsville Female College, at 413 Randolph Ave., Huntsville, 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. -
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 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 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: 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. -
Architecture notebook 10: Van Valkenburgh House, or the Steamboat Gothic House, on Lowe Ave., Huntsville, Ala.
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. -
Architecture notebook 10: Newman-Boyd-Cruse House, on E. Clinton Ave., Huntsville, Ala.
Newman-Boyd-Cruse House, built late 1800s. Late Victorian Style. Located on East Clinton Ave. in Huntsville, Alabama. -
Architecture notebook 10: Old Town Historic District, Huntsville, Ala.
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. -
Architecture notebook 10: Fearn House, or 504 Eustis, or the Fearn-Stewart Home, at 504 Eustis Ave., Huntsville, Ala.
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. -
Architecture notebook 10: Winchester Road 2612, Huntsville, Ala.
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. -
Architecture notebook 8: Historic bungalows in Huntsville, 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. -
Architecture notebook 8: Houses at 403 and 405 Franklin St., including the Bradley House, 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. -
Architecture notebook 8: Leroy Pope House, on McClung Ave., Huntsville, Ala.
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. -
Architecture notebook 8: Sunnyside, or Hampton House, Hampton Log Home, or Green Lawn, in Huntsville, Ala.
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. -
Architecture notebook 9: Log House and Byers Nursery, in Huntsville, Ala.
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. -
Architecture notebook 9: Laughinghouse-Phelps-Jones House, or Browning Place, on Pulaski Pike, Huntsville, Ala.
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. -
Architecture notebook 9: Bannister Alley House in Huntsville, Ala.
Bannister Alley House. Federal style. Located on Bannister Alley, Huntsville, Alabama. Demolished September 1979. -
Architecture notebook 9: UAH Chapel, or Union Chapel Church or UAH Art Gallery, moved in 1974 to Huntsville, Ala.
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. -
Architecture notebook 9: Yeatman House, at 528 Adams St., Huntsville, Ala.
Yeatman House, built c. 1861. Federal style with Greek Revival additions. Located at 528 Adams St., Huntsville, Alabama. -
Architecture notebook 9: Clarke House, or the Fackler-Pynchon-Powell House, at 518 Adams St., Huntsville, Ala.
Clarke House, also known as the Fackler-Pynchon-Powell House, built c. 1835. Located at 518 Adams St., Huntsville, Alabama. -
Architecture notebook 9: Chadwick House, or the Sprague-Chadwick House, at 307 Randolph Ave., 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. -
Architecture notebook 9: Cruse-Rolfe House, at 600 Adams St., Huntsville, Ala.
Cruse-Rolfe House, built c. 1825 by William and Samuel Cruse. Federal style with Greek Revival additions. Located at 600 Adams St., Huntsville, Alabama. -
Architecture notebook 3: Sheppard House, at 505 Holmes Ave., Huntsville, Ala.
Sheppard House, built 1828. Federal style. Located at 505 Holmes Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. -
Architecture notebook 3: Chapman House, or the Chapman-Johnson Home or Reuben Chapman House, at 2409 Dairy Lane, Huntsville, Ala.
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. -
Architecture notebook 3: Fearn House, or the Fearn-Garth House or Fearn-King Home, at 517 Franklin St., Huntsville, Ala.
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. -
Architecture notebook 3: Kelly House, on Kelly Cemetery Rd., Huntsville, Ala.
Kelly House, built c. 1825. Located on Kelly Cemetery Rd., Huntsville, Alabama. Demolished 1978. -
Architecture notebook 3: Hollowell-Mastin House, at 601 Franklin St., Huntsville, Ala.
Hollowell-Mastin House, built c. 1835. Located at 601 Franklin St., Huntsville, Alabama. -
Architecture notebook 3: Mastin-Batson House, at 516 Franklin St., Huntsville, Ala.
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. -
Architecture notebook 3: Rhett-Pipes House, at 621 Franklin St., Huntsville, Ala.
Rhett-Pipes House, built c. 1820s. Federal style. Located at 621 Franklin St., Huntsville, Alabama. -
Architecture notebook 3: Smith-Dark House, at 704 Adams St., Huntsville, Ala.
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. -
Architecture notebook 3: Erskine Clark House, at 515 Franklin St., Huntsville, Ala.
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. -
Architecture notebook 4: Ford Countess House, on Countess Rd., Huntsville, Ala.
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. -
Architecture notebook 4: Views of Victorian porches in Huntsville, Ala.
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. -
Architecture notebook 4: House at 413 Eustis Ave., Huntsville, Ala.
House at 413 Eustis Ave., built 1899. Located in Huntsville, Alabama. -
Architecture notebook 4: Dickson House, moved to 414 Echols Ave., Huntsville, Ala.
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. -
Architecture notebook 4: Crowson House, at 512 Randolph Ave., Huntsville, Ala.
Crowson House, built c. 1915. Located at 512 Randolph Ave., Huntsville, Alabama. -
Architecture notebook 5: Bost House, at 421 E. Clinton Ave., Huntsville, Ala.
Bost House, built c. 1896. Eastlake style. Located at 421 East Clinton Ave., Huntsville, Alabama.