Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Black Mountain Center for the Arts is located down the street from the museum. In 2002 the community raised 1.2 million dollars to buy the old Town Hall and convert it into the Art Center. [16] [17] Black Mountain News is a weekly newspaper covering Black Mountain and the Swannanoa Valley area.
Intheoaks, also known as In-the-oaks, is a historic estate and a national historic district located at Black Mountain, Buncombe County, North Carolina.The district encompasses nine contributing buildings, two contributing sites, seven contributing structures, and four contributing objects associated with a country estate of the 1920s.
Mountain Elevation General area Coordinates Named after Mount Mitchell: 6,684 ft/2,037 m South-central Blacks 35.76497, −82.265152 Elisha Mitchell (1793–1857), professor and surveyor Mount Craig: 6,647 ft/2,026 m South-central Blacks 35.777584, −82.261759 Locke Craig (1860–1925), North Carolina governor Balsam Cone: 6,611 ft/2,015 m
Blue Ridge Assembly Historic District is a national historic district located near Black Mountain, Buncombe County, North Carolina.The district encompasses 29 contributing buildings and 1 contributing object associated with the Blue Ridge Assembly, conference center of the Young Men's Christian Association.
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
Train Depot, Black Mountain, NC; part of the Black Mountain Villiage Historic District. This is an image of a place or building that is listed on the National Register of Historic Places in the United States of America .
A week after Hurricane Helene roared through, the smell of death overpowers the cool mountain air over the isolated twisting roads of devastated rural western North Carolina. ‘The power of water.’
Notable buildings include the George Stepp House (1907), Black Mountain Depot (1909), firehouse (1921) designed by Richard Sharp Smith, town hall (1927), Kaltman Building (1928), and Pure Oil Service Station (c. 1945). [2] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2004. [1]