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Newton Downtown Historic District is a national historic district located at Newton, Catawba County, North Carolina.The district encompasses 50 contributing buildings and 5 contributing objects in the central business district of Newton.
Long was born in Auburn, New York, and spent most of his life there.He was the director of the Cayuga County Museum of History and Art. He also taught at Cayuga Community College, as well as briefly at the Sorbonne in Paris, France, and at the Rochester Institute of Technology.
Formerly North Carolina Museum of Life and Science, science and natural history exhibits Museum of North Carolina Minerals: Spruce Pine: Mitchell: Western: Natural history: Minerals and gems found in the area and state [65] [66] Museum of North Carolina Traditional Pottery: Seagrove: Randolph: Piedmont Triad: Art: Features displays from ...
The North Carolina Museum of History, which gets nearly a half million visitors a year, will close for renovations lasting two to three years. The third-floor exhibits of the downtown Raleigh ...
The property now houses the Cayuga Museum of History and Art and Case Research Lab. [2] It is a history museum with collections of fine art and local history, and a cinema museum presenting the work of the Case Research Laboratory. The Dr. Sylvester Willard Mansion was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989. [1]
Listings on the National Register of Historic Places for places in Newton, North Carolina: Bost-Burris House; Catawba County Courthouse, a 1924 courthouse by architects Willard G. Rogers and J.J. Stout, [8] which now houses the Catawba County Museum of History; Foil–Cline House, also called the John A. Foil House, an 1883 domestic dwelling [8]
Catawba County Courthouse is a historic courthouse building located at Newton, Catawba County, North Carolina. It was built in 1924, and is a two-story, Renaissance Revival style granite veneered structure. It consists of a two-story main block flanked by slightly recessed two-story wings. [2]
The Howland Cobblestone Store, also known as the Howland Stone Store Museum, is an early 19th-century store significant for its unusual cobblestone architecture. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1994. [ 1 ]