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Architecture notebook 1A: Architectural details and elements.
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. -
Architecture notebook 2: Early nineteenth-century architectural details, doors, and windows.
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. -
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: Carpenter House, near Eutaw, Ala.
Carpenter House, built in the 1850s. Greek Revival style. Includes a 1950s outbuilding. Located west of Eutaw, Alabama. -
Architecture notebook 4: Cotaco Stage House, or the White House at Cotaco, near Cotaco, 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. -
Architecture notebook 4: Everdale House, near Selma, Ala.
Everdale House, built 1829. Late Federal and Greek Revival style. Slave quarters, built c. 1850s. Located near Selma, Alabama in Dallas County. -
Architecture notebook 4: Cotton Hill, on Old Madison Pike, Limestone County, Ala.
Cotton Hill, built c. 1832. Federal style. Located in Limestone County off Old Madison Pike. -
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: Arlington House Museum, Birmingham, Ala.
Arlington House Museum, built c. 1840. Greek Revival style. Located in Birmingham, 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.