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Alamance Battleground State Historic Site also includes the John Allen House, which family sources suggest was constructed around 1780. John's sister, Amy, was the wife of Herman Husband , an agitator and pamphleteer prominent in the Regulator movement who was present at the Battle of Alamance. [ 4 ]
Burlington: 4: Alamance Mill Village Historic District: Alamance Mill Village Historic District: August 16, 2007 : 3927-3981 NC 62 S, Great Alamance Creek W of NC 62S: Alamance: 5: Allen House: Allen House: February 26, 1970
The site of the Battle of Alamance, including red flags, to the right, marking militia positions and an 1880 commemorative monument, in the distance, to the far left.. The Battle of Alamance, which took place on May 16, 1771, was the final confrontation of the Regulator Movement, a rebellion in colonial North Carolina over various issues with the Colonial Government.
Allen House is a historic home located on the Alamance Battleground State Historic Site near Burlington, Alamance County, North Carolina. It was built in 1782, and is a two-story, hewn log dwelling with a gable roof. It rests on a stone foundation. The Allen house was moved to the Alamance Battleground in 1966 and restored as a homestead ...
It encompasses 108 contributing buildings in a primarily residential section of Burlington. Most of the buildings are houses, one to two stories high, built between the 1890s and the 1940s in late Victorian , Queen Anne , American Craftsman , and Colonial Revival styles of frame or brick construction.
Alamance Battleground State Historic Site: Burlington: Alamance: Piedmont Triad: Military: Visitor center exhibits focus on American Revolution battle, also historic Allen House: Alamance County Historical Museum: Burlington: Alamance: Piedmont Triad: Historic house: Located in the Victorian-period L. Banks Holt House Alexander-Little Wing ...
Alamance County, North Carolina Registered Historic Place stubs (62 P) Pages in category "National Register of Historic Places in Alamance County, North Carolina" The following 69 pages are in this category, out of 69 total.
It encompasses 138 contributing buildings in a primarily middle-class residential section of Burlington. Most of the dwellings date to the late-19th and early-20th century and include representative examples of Queen Anne and Colonial Revival style architecture. [2] It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1984. [1]