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The district encompasses five contributing buildings associated with the Southern Railway depot at Marion. The buildings date from about 1894 to about 1935. They are a commercial building (c. 1913), four-story former Buffaloe Building (c. 1908), commercial building (1911), Laughridge Furniture Company Building (c. 1894), and freight depot (c ...
The Southern Railway Depot on Depot St. in Asheville was closed in 1968 due to costs and was demolished in early 1969. [4] After this the Biltmore station served as Asheville's station until passenger train service was discontinued in early August of 1975. [5] The station now houses a restaurant. [6]
A new restaurant is set to open this summer in the former location of The Second Glass at 1540 S. 2nd St., Wilmington, N.C. MATT BORN.STARNEWS FILE PHOTO
Garland station (North Carolina) Goldsboro Union Station; Grifton station; Halifax, NC station; House station (North Carolina) Hope Mills station; Kenly station (North Carolina) Lake Waccamaw Depot; Lucama station; Maxton station; Maysville station (North Carolina) Milan station; Morvern station; Mt. Olive (North Carolina) Nashville station ...
The Depot Historic District is an industrial and commercial neighborhood in downtown Raleigh, North Carolina that was the city's railroad and warehouse distribution hub from the 1850s to 1950s. Located two blocks west of Fayetteville Street and to the north and east of the Norfolk and Southern railroad tracks, the district contains four blocks ...
Barge's Tavern is a historic tavern building located at Fayetteville, Cumberland County, North Carolina. It was built about 1800, and is a 1 + 1 ⁄ 2-story, three-bay, frame building with a gable roof and central chimney. A gable roofed porch and rear ell were added in the late-19th century.
All Saints Antiochian Orthodox Church is an Eastern Orthodox parish in Raleigh, North Carolina. The congregation is under the authority of the Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of North America , an archdiocese of the ancient Patriarchate of Antioch , which is rooted in the Middle East .
The developer, Stewart Coleman, changed his mind; [11] [12] he instead converted the building into today's tavern. [13] Coleman died in 2012, aged 63, after a short illness. [ 14 ] [ 15 ]