2831 - 2840 of 4076 Results
  1. East Ave Tabernacle ARP Church

    https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlotte/uptown-charlotte/east-ave-tabernacle-arp-church

    The Great Aunt Stella Center was once the home of East Avenue Tabernacle A.R.P. Church, one of the city’s first A.R.P. congregations. 

  2. Newell House, Jake F.

    https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlotte/plaza-midwood/jake-newell-house

    One of the oldest houses in Piedmont Park, an early Charlotte streetcar suburb, and home of longtime state Republican Party leader Jake Newell.

  3. Frederick Apartments

    https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlotte/uptown-charlotte/frederick-apartments

    The Frederick Apartments were once the home of W. J. Cash, author of the influential social history The Mind of the South. 

  4. Gateway and Century Buildings

    https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlotte/uptown-charlotte/gateway-and-century-buildings

    The Gateway and Century Buildings are the last early twentieth-century small-scale commercial buildings along uptown Charlotte’s West Trade Street corridor. 

  5. Good Samaritan Hospital Chapel

    https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlotte/uptown-charlotte/good-samaritan-hospital-chapel

    A small chapel is all that remains of Good Samaritan Hospital, the final surviving remnant of Charlotte’s a once-flourishing Third Ward Black community. 

  6. Grace AME Zion Church

    https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlotte/uptown-charlotte/grace-ame-zion-church

    The late Gothic Revival styled Grace A.M.E. Zion Church is the last surviving religious edifice from Charlotte’s historic Brooklyn neighborhood. 

  7. Little Rock AME Zion Church

    https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlotte/uptown-charlotte/little-rock-ame-zion-church

    The century-old Neoclassical Little Rock A.M.E. Zion Church building continues to serve one of Charlotte’s oldest Black congregations. 

  8. Lyles-Sims House

    https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlotte/uptown-charlotte/lyles-sims-house

    One of Fourth Ward’s only surviving original residences housed Mecklenburg County’s first strawberry farmer. 

  9. McCausland Building / Thacker's Restaurant

    https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlotte/uptown-charlotte/mccausland-building-thackers-restaurant

    The McCausland Building/Thacker’s Restaurant provides a rare glimpse into uptown Charlotte’s late-1800s commercial real estate landscape. 

  10. Mecklenburg County Courthouse

    https://hl.mecknc.gov/Properties/Designated-Historic-Landmarks/charlotte/uptown-charlotte/mecklenburg-county-courthouse

    The Louis Asbury designed Mecklenburg County Courthouse was the subject of a bitter dispute between urban Charlotteans and the county’s rural communities.