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3 results for Historic buildings--Lincoln County
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Record #:
8552
Author(s):
Abstract:
In 1844 on his way to the Democratic National Convention, James K. Polk spent the night at Magnolia Grove, the mansion of David Smith located in southern Lincoln County. The first tavern of the area, Dellinger's Tavern, stood just behind Magnolia Grove and not more than a hundred yards from the mansion was a rock building that would become the first jailhouse and first courthouse in Lincoln County. The construction of the main house at Magnolia Grove is truly remarkable for its state of preservation. Some of the bricks still bear fingerprints from the original masons. Magnolia Grove has been in the Love family since 1972 and it was Ed and Elizabeth Love who took such care to restore the house. The furniture is not from the 1820s, but the rest of the house still has original woodwork and plaster. The basement, once used to chain slaves, has metal rings in the walls. The bedroom where Polk slept is perfectly preserved.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 50 Issue 2, July 1982, p12-13, 33, il
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Record #:
10670
Abstract:
Mount Tirzah, the Lincoln County home of Capt. Alexander Brevard and his descendants, was built about 1800, and it was the largest of the ante-bellum plantation houses in the Catawba River region. The home stood until 1968, when it was burned to the ground by vagrants.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 37 Issue 2, June 1969, p11-12, il, por
Full Text:
Record #:
12949
Abstract:
Numerous old homes, important for historical as well as architectural reasons, survive in Lincoln County. Confederate Hall, Vesuvius, Woodside, and Lincoln's Courthouse, are some of the remaining examples.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 27 Issue 24, Apr 1960, p13, il
Full Text: