Browse Items (123 total)

  • Collection: Houses

Little Hale.tif
This house is also known as the McEachin-Little House. It is a square two-story structure with a center end-chimney and hip roof. A hall separates four rooms downstairs and the second story has the same plan.

Originally, thee were 16 bracketed…

McAlpine.tif
This house is also know as the Turner-McAlpin-Fellows House, It was built in 1840 by Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Pittman Turner. It belongs to the Frontier type made elegant with French Gothic lines and etched glass around the door entrances. The house…

Peck House.jpg
The home of poet Samuel Minturn Peck was located at 18th Street and 30th Avenue in southwest Tuscaloosa.. Peck was the first Poet Laureate of Alabama. He was born in Tuscaloosa on November 4, 1854. He died in 1938. The lovely old home was later…

ml house.jpg
Located at 816 22nd Avenue, this house was built around 1840 by Alabama Governor Joshua Martin. It was demolished in 1964.

Gluck House.jpg
This house was also known as the Gluck House. The house was said to have been built by Judge Peter Martin. It was demolished in 1938 to make way for local businesses.

snow house.jpg
E. N. C. Snow was a prominent Tuscaloosa businessman and civic leader. The house was also the residence of Prof. Michael Toumey, Alabama's first state geologist. The Snow House was razed in 1964 to make way for the new Tuscaloosa County Courthouse. …

house.jpg
The house known as the Wallace-Ozment House was built on Greensboro Avenue in 1830 by Dr. John Wallace. The house was a raised cottage with the first floor of brick and the second of wood. In 1870, William Henry and Elizabeth Ann Jenkins Hays…

Deg house.jpg
In 1962, this landmark antebellum home on Greensboro Avenue was razed. The house, known as the deGraffenried House (or the Hester- deGraffenried House), was constructed in 1845 as a wedding gift.

Located at 1217 Greensboro Avenue on the northwest…

Unknown house 121816.jpg
The historic Kennedy House near the Bibb County Courthouse in Centreville, was built in 1837 as a stagecoach stop and hotel called the Eagle Tavern. Union officers took over the hotel during the Civil War and federal troops remained in the building…

PCV house.jpeg
This information is from the 1929 thesis of Syndia Keene Smith: "The old Penn-Crabb-Van Hoose home of Tuscaloosa is an excellent example of the Southern Colonial House. It is a large dwelling of refined simplicity and practical taste. Built around…
Output Formats

atom, dcmes-xml, json, omeka-xml, rss2