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The T.Q. Donaldson House was built by William Williams for Thomas Q. Donaldson, a lawyer and member of the South Carolina Senate from Greenville County from 1872-1876. The house was originally built as a 1 + 1 ⁄ 2-story house; soon after the original construction, a second story was added. 14: Downtown Baptist Church: Downtown Baptist Church
Location of Greenville County in South Carolina. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Greenville County, South Carolina outside the city of Greenville. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Greenville County, South Carolina, United ...
C. Granville Wyche House is a historic home located at Greenville, South Carolina. It was built in 1931, and consists of a two-story, five bay central blocked flanked by one-story balconied projections. It is of blond brick in the Italian Renaissance style with a low-pitched tile roof, wide eaves with brackets, and full-length, first floor windows.
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Located in the district are the separately listed E. B. Ficklen House and Jesse R. Moye House. Other notable buildings include the Third Street Elementary School (1929), Glenn-Pender-Moore House (c. 1882), York-Overton House (1908), George W. and Lina Baker House (1907), Roy C. and Helen Flanagan House, Jarvis Harding House (1919), and A.G. and ...
House of CB (House of Celeb Boutique) is a women's fashion retailer founded by British Conna Walker in 2010 and headquartered in London, UK. [1] Since the start of the brand, Walker wanted to design clothing that would give the illusion of an hourglass silhouette, and continues to be the brand's unique selling proposition.
Broad Margin is the name given to the private residence originally commissioned by Gabrielle and Charlcey Austin. It is located in Greenville, South Carolina, United States, was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright and was built by local builder Harold T. Newton in 1954.
The Earle Town House as it appeared c. 1900 when owned by Charles David. In December 1927, the house was bought by Mary Chevillette Simms Oliphant, granddaughter of 19th-century novelist William Gilmore Simms and the author in her own right of more than a dozen books, including a once widely adopted public school history of South Carolina. [7]