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Second St., and 300-600 blocks of E. Raleigh St., Siler City, North Carolina Coordinates 35°43′30″N 79°27′32″W / 35.72500°N 79.45889°W / 35.72500; -79
[3] Name on the Register [4] Image Date listed [5] Location City or town Description 1: Alston-DeGraffenried House: November 18, 1974 (West of Pittsboro off U.S. Route 64; also the northern side of U.S. Route 64, 0.4 miles (0.64 km) west of its junction with NC 1564
Siler City Commercial Historic District is a national historic district located at Siler City, Chatham County, North Carolina. The district encompasses 45 contributing buildings in the central business district of Siler City. They are primarily one- and two-story brick buildings dated between 1897 and 1945.
Siler City is located in western Chatham County. U.S. Route 64 passes through the northern part of the town as 11th Street, leading east 16 miles (26 km) to Pittsboro, the Chatham County seat, and west 21 miles (34 km) to Asheboro.
The home, located at 503 W. Elk St. in the Chatham County town of Siler City, was up for sale last year, The News & Observer reported. Chatham County tax records show that Kathryn Nail now owns ...
Siler City City Hall, also known as the Siler City Town Hall or Municipal Building, is a historic city hall located at Siler City, Chatham County, North Carolina. It is a two-story, T-shaped, seven-bay Colonial Revival style building. It is faced in granite and features a two-story, tetrastyle pedimented pavilion with a portico in antis.
Gregson-Hadley House is a historic home located at Siler City, Chatham County, North Carolina.The house was built in approximately 1903, and is named for leading Siler City industrialist Julius Clarence Gregson, for whom it was built, and his brother-in-law Wade Hadley, to whom it was sold in 1920.
The Siler City facility is expected to greatly expand Wolfspeed’s capacity to produce wafers. The company has pledged to employ more than 1,800 people at the site by the end of the decade.