41 - 50 of 204 Results
  1. Thad Adams House

    http://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlotte/Elizabeth/thad-adams-house

    One of the earliest homes in the Elizabeth neighborhood housed the family of Thad Adams during most of his fifty years of legal practice. 

  2. Cohen-Fumero House

    http://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. 

  3. Jones-Garibaldi House

    http://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.

  4. East Ave Tabernacle ARP Church

    http://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. 

  5. Lambeth-Gossett House

    http://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.

  6. Providence Presbyterian Church

    http://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. 

  7. Earle Sumner Draper House

    http://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.

  8. Falls Store

    http://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/davidson/falls-store

    The grocery and convenience store has long served Davidson’s African American community as a valued social gathering destination.

  9. Helper Hotel

    http://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/davidson/helper-hotel

    The grocery and convenience store has long served Davidson’s African American community as a valued social gathering destination.

  10. McLaughlin House

    http://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.