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Backroads Gothic Revival
Another beautiful farmhouse on the Tennessee backroads.
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Old House on a Hill
Home is a place where you grow up wanting to leave, and grow old wanting to get back to. – John Ed Pearce
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John McKenzie House, Bowling Green
No need to adjust the color on your screen. This house really is that red! This bright brick home in Bowling Green was built in 1890 by James McKenzie. James McKenzie was known for several things in his life including his profession as a lawyer and eventually in agriculture. He served as a private during
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Soda Pop Junction, Lynnville
Let me introduce you to the little town of Lynnville, Tennessee. Settled in 1809. Population 310. But more specifically to the Soda Pop Junction. This small town burger and milkshake joint calls a historic 1860 building its home. It was built right around the railroad boom. Just steps from the front door are the tracks
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Found on a Tennessee Backroad
You had me at white fence and wagon wheel. Another old Tennessee farmhouse just sittin’ pretty on a backroad.
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Massive New Orleans Mansion
Aaaaaaaand the award for house that’s so big it almost won’t fit in my picture goes toooooo……..drum roll please……the Bosworth-Hammond House in New Orleans! This massive beauty was built in 1860 for Abel Bosworth and his wife, Rachel. It was later bought by the Hammond family and the house remained in their family until 1979.
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Sweet Decatur, AL Tudor
The perfect little 1937 tudor cottage in Decatur, Alabama. There are so many things to love about this house!
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James Wilhoite House, Allisona
James Wilhoite was born in Shelbyville. In his earlier years, he flip-flopped back and forth between Shelbyville and the small community of Allisona before finally landing in Allisona and building this beautiful Italianate in 1877. He started out in merchandising and dabbled in the grocery business before settling on farming his 200 acres of “good,
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Hobson House in Bowling Green
This Italianate mansion is The Hobson House or also known as Riverview. Construction on the mansion began in the late 1850s by the youngest Union colonial on record, Atwood G. Hobson. The Civil War put a stop to his plans when thousands of Confederate soldiers occupied Bowling Green. In hopes that his home would be
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Old Homestead by the Creek
By the creek the old homestead sits. The perfect place to build a life during simpler times.










