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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Harrison Brothers Hardware, built c. 1834, facade c. 1914, storefront in the early 20th century. Located at South Side Square 124 in Huntsville, Alabama.
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.