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The Hayes Barton Historic District is a neighborhood located northwest of downtown Raleigh, North Carolina, United States.Hayes Barton, an upper class neighborhood designed by landscape architect Earle Sumner Draper, contains 457 buildings on 1,750 acres (7.1 km 2).
Five Points, like the Warehouse District, is one of Raleigh's historic gay villages. [1] A popular LGBT-friendly spot was opened here in the 1950s. [ 1 ] In the 1970s, The Moustrap, a gay bar and community gathering place for drag queens, lesbians, and transgender people, opened next to the Rialto Theater.
Universities and colleges in Raleigh, North Carolina (5 C, 8 P) Pages in category "Tourist attractions in Raleigh, North Carolina" The following 23 pages are in this category, out of 23 total.
Completed (with two stories) in 1862 on Halifax St., the building was home to one of the earliest North Carolina railroads, the Raleigh & Gaston, eventually incorporated into the 20th century's Seaboard Coast Line. Acquired by the state in the 1970s for use as an office building and moved to its present location on N. Salisbury St.
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UNC Chapel Hill’s Carolina Inn after a snowfall around 1960. The hotel, opened in 1924, is said to be haunted by the spirit of a public health doctor named William Jacocks who lived there for ...
The top states of origin for overnight visitors to the coastal region in 2022 were: North Carolina, Virginia, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Maryland, New York, New Jersey and Georgia. 45%
Mordecai Place Historic District (/ m ɔː r d ə ˈ k i /) [2] is a historic neighborhood and national historic district located at Raleigh, North Carolina.The district encompasses 182 contributing buildings and 1 contributing object in the most architecturally varied of Raleigh's early-20th century suburbs for the white middle-class.