261 - 270 of 577 Results
  1. Bank of Huntersville

    https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/huntersville/bank-huntersville

    The nineteenth-century Bank of Huntersville once anchored the town’s first commercial center. 

  2. Huntersville Town Jail

    https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/huntersville/huntersville-town-jail

    Huntersville’s oldest surviving municipal building served as the town’s only local jail for nearly three decades. 

  3. Hopewell Presbyterian Church

    https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/huntersville/hopewell-presbyterian-church

    Hopewell Presbyterian Church is the home of one of Mecklenburg County’s earliest Presbyterian congregations. 

  4. Hugh Torrance House and Store

    https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/huntersville/hugh-torrance-house-and-store

    The Torance House and Store was the first Mecklenburg County residence of the family that later owned Cedar Grove, the county’s largest plantation. 

  5. Torrence Lytle School

    https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/huntersville/torrence-lytle-school

    Opened originally as the segregated Huntersville Colored School for grades 1-11, the Torrence-Lytle School was north Mecklenburg County’s first and only public high school for African American students. 

  6. St. Mark's Episcopal Church

    https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/huntersville/st-marks-episcopal-church

    Mecklenburg County’s second oldest Episcopal congregation worships in the 1887 St. Mark's Episcopal Church building. 

  7. McAuley Road Farmland

    https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/huntersville/mcauley-road-farmland

    The largest surviving area that still reflects the once prevalent rural and agricultural character of Mecklenburg County. 

  8. Huntersville School #2

    https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/huntersville/huntersville-school-2

    One of Mecklenburg County’s six surviving Rosenwald schools, Huntersville School #2 educated generations of African American children while symbolizing local resistance to segregation. 

  9. Davidson Colored School / Ada Jenkins School

    https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/davidson/davidson-colored-school-ada-jenkins-school

    Davidson’s oldest public school building, the Ada Jenkins School is a rare example of an African American school building from the Jim Crow era.

  10. Armour-Adams House

    https://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.