Kittrell House | |
Location in Arkansas | |
Location | 1103 Hickory St., Texarkana, Arkansas |
---|---|
Coordinates | 33°26′1″N94°2′11″W / 33.43361°N 94.03639°W Coordinates: 33°26′1″N94°2′11″W / 33.43361°N 94.03639°W |
Area | less than one acre |
Built | 1900 |
Architect | Thompson, Charles L. |
Architectural style | Colonial Revival |
MPS | Thompson, Charles L., Design Collection TR |
NRHP reference # | 82000864 [1] |
Added to NRHP | December 22, 1982 |
The Kittrell House is a historic house at 1103 Hickory Street in Texarkana, Arkansas. It is a two-story Foursquare wood-frame house with a hipped roof, set on a high brick foundation. It sits on a terraced corner lot, raised above the sidewalk level by a low wall. A full-width single-story porch extends across the main facade, supported by Ionic columns and with a balustrade of urn-shaped balusters. The house was designed by Charles L. Thompson, a noted Arkansas architect, and built c. 1900–10. [2]
The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982. [1]
Kittrell is a town in Vance County, North Carolina, United States.
The William H. Martin House is a historic house at 815 Quapaw Avenue in Hot Springs, Arkansas. It was designed by architect Frank W. Gibb in 1904 and built in the same year. It includes Colonial Revival and Classical Revival architectural elements. It is an imposing building with a two-story Greek temple portico supported by four fluted Corinthian style pillars. The portico's cornice is modillioned with scrolled brackets, and has a band of dentil molding. When built, the house was on the outskirts of Hot Springs.
The W.S. McClintock House is a historic house at 83 West Main Street in Marianna, Arkansas. It is a grand two-story wood-frame Classical Revival building designed by Charles L. Thompson and built in 1912. The symmetrical main facade has at its center a massive two-story portico supported by groups of Ionic columns, with a dentillated cornice and a flat roof. A single-story porch extends from both sides of this portico, supported by Doric columns, and wrapping around to the sides of the house. This porch is topped by an ironwork railing.
The Denison House is a historic house at 427 Garland Avenue in West Helena, Arkansas. It is a single story brick structure with a broad and shallow hip roof with wide hip-roof dormers, built in 1910 by J. W. Denison, West Helena's first mayor. It has a wraparound porch supported by Tuscan columns. It is one of West Helena's finest Colonial Revival houses.
The University of Arkansas Campus Historic District is a historic district that was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on September 23, 2009. The district covers the historic core of the University of Arkansas campus, including 25 buildings.
This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Jefferson County, Arkansas.
The Royal Arch Masonic Lodge in Austin, Texas is a three-story beige brick Masonic building that was built in Beaux Arts style in 1926. It was designed by Texas architects J. B. Davies and William E. Ketchum. It was listed as a historic landmark by the city of Austin in 2000, and it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2005.
The White House is a historic house at 1015 Perry Street in Helena, Arkansas. It is a two-story brick building, built in 1910 to a design by architect Charles L. Thompson. The Colonial Revival building has a pyramidal roof with projecting gable sections. A single-story porch wraps around two sides of the house, supported by grouped Tuscan columns. The front entry is framed by sidelight windows and pilasters. It is the only surviving Thompson design in Helena.
James M. Davis House is a historic house and national historic district located at Pelham, Spartanburg County, South Carolina.
The Capt. Charles C. Henderson House is a historic house at Henderson and 10th Streets in Arkadelphia, Arkansas. Built in 1906 and significantly altered in 1918–20, it is the largest and most elaborate house of that period on 10th Street. When first built, it was a 2-1/2 story hip-roofed Queen Anne style house with some Classical Revival elements. Its most prominent feature from this period is the turret with elaborate finial. In 1918-20 Henderson significantly modified the house, added the boxy two-story Craftsman-style porch. The house is now on the campus of Henderson State University.
The Dean House is a historic house at 1520 Beech Street in Texarkana, Arkansas. It is a two-story wood frame house, built in 1911 for Thomas Mercer Dean, a local farmer and lumberman. Its principal distinguishing feature is its large Colonial Revival portico, with paired two-story Tuscan columns supporting an elaborate entablature. Porches wrap around the north and east sides of the house, and there is a port-cochere at the southern corner.
The Wynn-Price House is a historic house on Price Drive, just outside Garland, Arkansas. The house is a rambling two-story wood frame structure, roughly in an "E" shape, with three gable-roofed sections joined by hyphen sections. The gable ends have columned porticos, and the southern (front) facade has an elaborate two-story Greek temple front. With its oldest portion dating to 1844, it is one Arkansas' finest antebellum Greek Revival plantation houses. It was built by William Wynn, one of the region's most successful antebellum plantation owners.
The Jacob Wolf House is a historic house on Arkansas Highway 5 in Norfork, Arkansas. It is a log structure, built in 1825 by Jacob Wolf, the first documented white settler of the area. Architecturally it's a "saddle bag", which is a two-story dog trot with the second floor built over the open breezeway. A two-story porch extends on one facade, with an outside stair giving access to the upper floor rooms. The building's original chinking has been replaced by modern mortaring. It is maintained by the Department of Arkansas Heritage as a historic house museum.
Kittrell-Dail House is a historic home located near Renston, Pitt County, North Carolina. It was built about 1855, and is a two-story, three-bay, side-gable, single pile frame dwelling with Greek Revival style design elements. It has two contemporary shed roofed wings and a 20th-century rear ell. A one-story, hip roof porch, almost the length of the house, was added about 1920–1930. Also on the property is the contributing kitchen building.
Ashburn Hall, also known as the Capehart House, is a historic plantation house located near Kittrell, Vance County, North Carolina. It was built in the 1840s or early 1850s, and is a two‑story, three‑bay, T‑shaped frame dwelling in a restrained Greek Revival style. It features a broad, one‑story pedimented entrance portico, with four spaced, paired fluted Tuscan order columns.
Thomas Capehart House is a historic home located near Kittrell, Vance County, North Carolina. It was built between 1866 and 1870, and is a small two-story, "L"-shaped frame board-and-batten, dwelling in the Downingesque Gothic style. It features ornate bargeboards, sawn ornament, and traceried windows. Also on the property is a contributing small outbuilding, also of board-and-batten.
Josiah Crudup House is a historic home located near Kittrell, Vance County, North Carolina. It was built between 1833 and 1837, purchased by Josiah Crudup around 1835, and was originally a version of the tripartite Federal style composition and consisted of a two-story, three bay, central section with one-story flanking wings. It was later enlarged and modified to its present form as a two-story central portion, topped by a steep pediment, and flanking two-story sections each with rather steep hip roofs.
The Hoag House is a historic house in Judsonia, Arkansas. It is located on a wooded lot northeast of the junction of Arkansas Highways 157 and 367 in the northeastern part of the town. It is a rambling two-story wood frame structure, with central section oriented north-south, and projecting gabled sections on the east and west sides. A two-story turret stands at the northeast junction of the main and eastern sections, topped by a pyramidal roof with gable dormers. A single-story porch with Victorian decoration wraps around the outside of the turret, joining the northern and eastern sections. Built about 1900, the house is locally distinctive for its central two-story box structure, and its Folk Victorian styling.
The Short-Dodson House is a historic house at 755 Park Avenue in Hot Springs, Arkansas. It is a 2-1/2 story masonry structure, its exterior finished in a combination of stone, brick, and wood. It has asymmetrical massing with projecting gables of varying sizes and shapes, and a round corner turret, with an undulating single-story porch wrapping around its south side. It was designed by Joseph G. Horn, and built c. 1902 for Dr. Omar Short, one of many doctors whose homes lined Park Avenue.
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