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This article originally appeared on Asheville Citizen Times: Christmas, holiday events near Asheville: 5 towns for NC, SC day trips. Show comments. Advertisement. Advertisement. In Other News.
Arriving via Asheville Regional Airport, President Trump and First Lady Melania Trump visited and surveyed the damage from Hurricane Helene. [1] California: Pacific Palisades: Arriving via Los Angeles International Airport, President Trump and First Lady Melania Trump toured the neighborhood affected by the Southern California wildfires. [2] [3 ...
On January 19, 1922, the Asheville Citizen-Times reported that there were plans to build a resort around Beaverdam Creek. The Lake View Park Company 1,100 acres of land on both sides of the creek for development, with plans for an artificial lake, homes, hotels and a golf course. Additional land was purchased from the estate of Paul Roebling. [5]
[3] Liston B. Ramsey Freeway – official name of US 23, on the section that overlaps with I-26 in Madison. [3] Morris L. McGough Freeway – official name of I-26/US 19/US 23 from I-240 to the Buncombe–Madison county line (approved on April 4, 2002). [3]
The Smith-McDowell House is a c. 1840 brick mansion located in Asheville, North Carolina. [2] It is one of the "finest antebellum buildings in Western North Carolina." [2] Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, it was the first mansion built in Asheville and is the oldest surviving brick structure in Buncombe County.
In 1893, Montford was incorporated as an autonomous village to the north of Asheville. This was a tiny community of about 50 people, mainly local businessmen and their families. In 1889 the Asheville Loan, Construction, and Improvement Company began to develop the neighborhood.
Sarah Honosky, Asheville Citizen Times November 27, 2023 at 5:06 AM ASHEVILLE - When Keith Aitken, the city's new urban forester, moved to a .9-acre lot in North Buncombe County in 2005, his house ...
Beaucatcher Mountain is located in a portion of the Appalachian Mountain Range known as the Great Craggy Mountains, in Asheville, North Carolina.Its name was said to have been coined in the mid-1800s [2] by James W. Patton, who once teased his sister-in-law, Charlotte Kerry, after watching her stroll the mountainside with her "beau".