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Jones-Garibaldi House
https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlotte/south-inner/jones-garibaldi-house
The Jones-Garibaldi House is one of the oldest homes on East Park Avenue, the most prestigious residential district in the oldest portion of Dilworth, Charlotte’s first streetcar suburb.
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Cohen-Fumero House
https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlotte/east-middle-and-outer/cohen-fumero-house
The home of well-known artists Herb Cohen and José Fumero was created by renowned Modernist architect and Charlottean Murray Whisnant.
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Lambeth-Gossett House
https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlotte/south-inner/lambeth-gossett-house
In addition to being one of the older homes in the most elite enclave of Charlotte’s Myers Park neighborhood, the Lambeth-Gossett House is one of the city’s finest examples of Bungalow-influenced architecture.
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East Ave Tabernacle ARP Church
https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlotte/uptown-charlotte/east-ave-tabernacle-arp-church
The Great Aunt Stella Center was once the home of East Avenue Tabernacle A.R.P. Church, one of the city’s first A.R.P. congregations.
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Providence Presbyterian Church
https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlotte/south-middle/providence-presbyterian-church
Providence Presbyterian Church is home to one of Mecklenburg County’s earliest Christian congregations.
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Earle Sumner Draper House
https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlotte/south-inner/earle-sumner-draper-house
One of the South’s most prolific professionally trained landscape architects of the early 20th century once called the Earle Sumner Draper House home.
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Providence Womens Club Community House
https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/ballantyne/providence-womens-club-community-house
Since 1939, the Rustic Revival styled log Community House has hosted the activities of the Providence Women’s Club and numerous other local groups.
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Hezekiah Alexander House
https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlottehezekiah-alexander-house
Charlotte’s oldest extant building was the home of a framer of North Carolina’s first Constitution and Bill of Rights.
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McLaughlin House
https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlotte/elizabeth/bryce-mclaughlin-house
Predating Elizabeth’s Rosemont section, the S. Bryce McLaughlin House is the only known Gustav Stickley design among the county’s designated landmarks.
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Walter L. Alexander House
https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlotte/elizabeth/walter-l-alexander-house
Past residents of the Walter L. Alexander House include a successful hotelier, the namesake of a major Charlotte thoroughfare, and a retired U.S. Navy Rear Admiral.
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