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Downtown Main Street Historic District (North Wilkesboro, North Carolina) ... J. L. Hemphill House; Holbrook Farm (Traphill, North Carolina) Benjamin Hubbard House; J.
Robert Cleveland Log House: Robert Cleveland Log House: February 1, 1972 : Wilkes Heritage Museum, 100 E. Main St: Wilkesboro: Relocated from near Pulear to near the Old Wilkes County Jail in downtown Wilkesboro in 1986. [6] 4
Gateway Restaurant (3%) The Upstairs (2%) We also had more than 100 write-in submissions, with quite a few people submitting restaurants that were already in the poll.
The Downtown Wilkesboro Historic District in Wilkesboro, North Carolina is a 37-acre (15 ha) historic district that was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2009. It included 69 contributing buildings, two contributing sites and one contributing object. It includes architecture by Wheeler, McMichael and Co. [1]
The architectural firm Benton & Benton designed the former Bank of North Wilkesboro II (1923), the Hotel Wilkes (1926), and the former Town Hall (1939). Other notable buildings include the Liberty Theater (c. 1946), former Bank of North Wilkesboro (1892), and Tomlinson Department Store (1927).
The Wilkes County Courthouse in Wilkesboro, North Carolina was designed by Wheeler, Runge & Dickey in Classical Revival and Beaux Arts style. It was built in 1903. [1] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979. The listing included three contributing buildings on 3.1 acres (1.3 ha). [1]
Wilkesboro is a town in and the county seat of Wilkes County, North Carolina, United States. [4] The population was 3,687 at the 2020 census . [ 5 ] The town is located along the south bank of the Yadkin River , directly opposite the town of North Wilkesboro .
In 1985, Uli Bennewitz pushed a change in the North Carolina law books. This change made it legal for a brewpub to exist under state laws. The next year (1986) Bennewitz opened NC's first brewpub, Weeping Radish Bavarian Restaurant. On August 13, 2005, House Bill 392 from the NC General Assembly was signed by then-Governor Mike Easley.