181 - 190 of 204 Results
  1. William & Margaret Abernethy House

    http://hl.mecknc.gov/facility/william-margaret-abernethy-house

    The Abernethy House was once the centerpiece of the farm that supported the operations of Sundale Dairies. 

  2. Washam Farm

    http://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/huntersville/washam-farm

    The Washam Farm was anchored by a rare example of a bungalow-style farmhouse originally constructed as a three-room tenant house. 

  3. Charlotte City Hall

    http://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlotte/uptown-charlotte/charlotte-city-hall

    The Neoclassical styled Charlotte City Hall anchored an entire city block dedicated to municipal government. 

  4. Builders Building

    http://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlotte/uptown-charlotte/builders-building

    The Builders Building once housed the offices of Charlotte’s preeminent construction professionals. 

  5. Charlotte Fire Station #4

    http://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlotte/uptown-charlotte/charlotte-fire-station-4

    The C. C. Hook-designed Fire Station No. 4 is uptown Charlotte’s only surviving pre-WWII building that once served as a fire station. 

  6. Charlotte New Look Bus

    http://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlotte/uptown-charlotte/charlotte-new-look-bus

    The Charlotte “New Look” GM Buses served the city’s public transit needs for more than thirty years. 

  7. Good Samaritan Hospital Chapel

    http://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlotte/uptown-charlotte/good-samaritan-hospital-chapel

    A small chapel is all that remains of Good Samaritan Hospital, the final surviving remnant of Charlotte’s a once-flourishing Third Ward Black community. 

  8. Lyles-Sims House

    http://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlotte/uptown-charlotte/lyles-sims-house

    One of Fourth Ward’s only surviving original residences housed Mecklenburg County’s first strawberry farmer. 

  9. Mecklenburg County Courthouse

    http://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlotte/uptown-charlotte/mecklenburg-county-courthouse

    The Louis Asbury designed Mecklenburg County Courthouse was the subject of a bitter dispute between urban Charlotteans and the county’s rural communities. 

  10. Armour-Adams House

    http://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/davidson/armour-adams-house

    The Armour-Adams House offers a unique insight into the changes that drove Davidson’s evolution from the early 1800s to today.