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The T.Q. Donaldson House was built by William Williams for Thomas Q. Donaldson, a lawyer and member of the South Carolina Senate from Greenville County from 1872-1876. The house was originally built as a 1 + 1 ⁄ 2-story house; soon after the original construction, a second story was added. 14: Downtown Baptist Church: Downtown Baptist Church
Woodside Cotton Mill Village Historic District is a national historic district located in Greenville County, South Carolina. The district encompasses 278 contributing buildings and 2 contributing sites in an early 20th century urban South Carolina textile mill village. Centered on a mill founded by John T. Woodside in 1902, the district is ...
30 acres (12 ha) Architect. G. L. Norrman. NRHP reference No. 05001156 [1] Added to NRHP. October 4, 2005. Springwood Cemetery is an American historic cemetery in Greenville, South Carolina, listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It is the oldest municipal cemetery in the state and has approximately 7,700 marked, and 2,600 unmarked ...
July 1, 1982. Col. Elias Earle Historic District is a national historic district located at Greenville, South Carolina. It encompasses 74 contributing buildings in a middle-class neighborhood of Greenville. The houses primarily date from about 1915 to 1930, and include Neoclassical, Colonial Revival, Tudor Revival, and bungalow styles.
34°15′25″N 82°05′05″W. / 34.256944°N 82.084722°W / 34.256944; -82.084722 ( The Oaks) Coronaca vicinity. 11. Old Cokesbury and Masonic Female College and Conference School. Old Cokesbury and Masonic Female College and Conference School. August 25, 1970. ( #70000589) North of Greenwood at the junction of South Carolina ...
July 1, 1982. The Lanneau-Norwood House (Lanneau-Norwood-Funderburk House[2] or "Alta Vista"[3]) is a historic, late 19th-century house on Belmont Avenue in Greenville, South Carolina. [4] The house is an outstanding example of Second Empire architecture in the American South and is one of the last surviving Victorian -era homes in Greenville. [5]