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Yellow Victorian in Sparta
Sunshine on a cloudy day! Sparta, Tennessee beauty circa 1870.
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Rockwood, TN Victorian
The Haggard-Wright House in Rockwood. Circa 1895.
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Pulaski Italianate Dates to the 1830s
This beautiful blue Italianate was built sometime in the 1830s in Pulaski. It was originally a simpler frame home and they added all of the Italianate trim a little later. Painted blue in the last 10 years or so.
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Ashland, Virginia Historic Home
A little historical beauty in Ashland, Virginia! The Sinton House, circa 1890, located right on the railline.
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1900 Blue Four Square in the Boro
This beautiful home in Murfreesboro was built around 1900. We toured this one a couple of years ago on the Candlelight Tour of Homes and it is GORGEOUS inside. *2nd picture from the 2017 real estate listing.
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Rockwood Historic House
Circa 1895 in Rockwood, Tennessee. A lot going on with this one!
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Kalorama Castle in Staunton
Talk about a castle! Kalorama Castle in Staunton, Virginia was built in 1882 for Arista Hoge. Hoge was the Treasurer of Staunton and the founder of the Atlas Insurance Agency. I’d consider this one a sorta frankenhouse in style because of the many achitectures that it reflects. It was originially built as a brick federal
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Olivet Methodist Episcopal Church
I cannot get over this church! Olivet United Methodist Church was built in 1871 in the small community of Riversburg. It’s not often that you see an old church this Victorian! The doors are significant to its architecture in that they are considered “Christian door” style to represent an open Bible. Highway 31 soon came
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J. T. Anderson House
The J. T. Anderson House was built in 1900 for the Anderson family. J. T. was a banker and one of the organizers of the first telephone systems in the area. He played a role in the organizing of White county’s development. In 1940, this home was purchased by Braxton Hunter for use as their
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Classical Revival with Touch of Italianate
The Patterson-Edwards House in Pulaski was built in 1890. It’s a Classical Revival with Italianate architecture, too. The columns seem so subtle, but there are so many and they have a lot of detail. I love the original iron fence.









