North Harris Street Historic District

The North Harris Street Historic District is a 60 acres (24 ha) historic district which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989. It is roughly bounded by First Ave., Washington Ave., E. McCarty St., N. Harris St., Malone St., and Warthen St. in Sandersville, Georgia.[1]

North Harris Street Historic District
LocationRoughly bounded by First Ave., Washington Ave., E. McCarty St., N. Harris St., Malone St., and Warthen St., Sandersville, Georgia
Coordinates32°59′20″N 82°48′37″W
Area60 acres (24 ha)
ArchitectCharles E. Choate; Ellamae League
Architectural styleLate 19th and 20th Century Revivals, Greek Revival, Queen Anne
NRHP reference No.89000801[1]
Added to NRHPJuly 20, 1989

It includes works designed by architect Charles E. Choate and by his niece Ellamae Ellis League. It includes Greek Revival, Queen Anne and Late 19th and 20th Century Revivals architecture. In 1989 it included 88 contributing buildings as well as 11 non-contributing buildings and a non-contributing site.[1][2]

Architect Ellamae Ellis League designed one or more contributing buildings in the district which were built in the late 1930s.[note 1] She designed the Leonard House (1939), at 213 N. Harris, a one-story brick Colonial Revival style house featuring "paired end chimneys, a parapet roof and an accentuated front door entry." The doorway has a "decorative crown" and "slender columns set in-antis."[2]

Notes

  1. The NRHP nomination document mentions League having designed homes in the plural, but is ambiguous as to which ones those are. It clearly identifies the Leonard House as having been designed by her, and implies but is not clear whether she designed the Neo-classical Holt-Halton House at 239 N. Harris and the Craftsman style house at 319 Warthen (see #24 in accompanying photos).
gollark: AMD had a terrible architecture for ages and didn't fix it until Zen.
gollark: Intel was sandbagging a lot due to low competition and also got apified by process issues.
gollark: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2105.09938.pdf
gollark: A fun bit is that tasks and the privilege level are entirely orthogonal, and the security level of a thing is basically just what environment and upvalues it has.
gollark: All the background tasks are just Lua coroutines. You simply submit a function to run and a bit of metadata, and it runs them in the event loop.

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.