- Source: Dawson Street Residential Historic District
The Dawson Street Residential Historic District, in Thomasville, Georgia, is a 200-acre (0.81 km2) historic district which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984. It then included 380 contributing buildings and three contributing sites.
It is located to the north of the city's commercial center and its courthouse square. As well as houses, the district includes several churches, two historic cemeteries (one for whites and one for blacks), a historic city park, and pecan orchards associated with some of the houses.
It includes two properties already separately-listed on the National Register:
Hardy Bryan House (or Carter House), 312 North Broad Street, a Greek Revival house built by a carpenter/builder which is believed to be one of the earliest surviving houses in Thomasville;
Lapham-Patterson House (1885), 626 North Dawson Street, a National Historic Landmark.
Also notable in the district are:
several rare examples of single pen houses on Broad Street and Lutten Lane
Hardaway House (1856), 526 North Dawson Street) designed by builder/architect John Wind
312 North Dawson Street (1905), a "concrete stone" structure built as the administration building for Young's Female Academy.
References
External links
Media related to Dawson Street Residential Historic District at Wikimedia Commons
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Washington, D.C.
- Dawson Street Residential Historic District
- Hardy Bryan House
- Lapham–Patterson House
- Dawson Creek
- High Street
- John Wind
- National Register of Historic Places listings in Thomas County, Georgia
- Albany Monteith Historic District
- Alaska Highway
- Acushnet Heights Historic District