United States
Department of the Interior National Park Service
National
Register of Historic Places
Auburn Historic District
Logan County, KY
(C) Contributing historical places within the district.
(NC) Non-contributing buildings, but they are within the historic
district.
Click on place name for photo which will open in a
separate window
Photos provided by Ms. Sue Ellen Browning
West Main Street
- (NC) Auburn's Branch Library and
Museum, 433 West Main Street, 1989,
One-story wood-framed building with wood panel siding and parapet roof on front facade.
Set in large blacktopped parking area. Site of farmhouse for R. G. Wilson farm from which
subdivisions along Wilson Avenue were created.
- (C)LO-A-30 W. H. McKenzie
house, 429 West Main Street. 1911.
One-and-one-half-story wood-framed.
- (C) Garage/shed. 1930's. Wood-framed with shed roof and vertical
board siding.
- (C) LO-A-29 Claude and Ruth Peart
House, 421 West Main Street. 1938.
Two-story brick-veneered house with Neoclassical styling. Two-story portico across front
facade.
- (NC) Garage shop, 1993. Two-story wood-framed building.
- (C) LO-A-28 Pearce Memorial Methodist
Church, 411 West Main Street.
1937. Architect: Thomas Gardner, Nashville, TN. Stone church with Gothic Revival
detailing.
- (NC) Manse 1951. Stone-veneered house with gable roof.
- (NC) 321 West Main
Street. 1973. One-story commercial building.
- (NC) Vacant lot between 309 and 321 West Main Street. Landscaped lot.
- (NC) United States Post
Office, 309 West Main Street. 1960's.
- (NC) 219 West Main
Street. Late 1950's or 1960's.
- (C) LO-A-27
Jamerson/Stagner House, 211 W. Main St. c. 1860-1874.
Remodeled and east block and front porch added c. 1902-1913.
- Cast-iron fence. c. 1916-1925. Extension of fence in front of
LO-A-26.
- (C) LO-A-26 G. W. Davidson
House, 125 W. Main St. 1916. Listed in the
National Register October 29,1982. Two-story brick-veneered house with Colonial Revival
styling. Monumental two-story portico added in 1920's or early 1930's giving house
Neoclassical appearance. This house re- placed a two-story frame house destroyed by fire.
G. W. Davidson was Auburn's most important late 19th century and early 20th century
businessman who built the G. W. Davidson Banking Company Building (LO-A-25) and Brick Row
(LO- A-20 - 24).
- (C) Water tower/well house. 1920's or 1930's. Tall, square,
wood-framed structure with pyramidal roof.
- (C) Servants'house or summer kitchen. 1900 - 1919. Wood-framed with
gable roof, windows on two sides and weatherboard siding.
- Cast-iron fence. 1916-1925. Only historic cast-iron fence remaining
in Auburn.
- (NC) Trans Financial
Bank, 107 West Main Street. 1991. One-story
brick-veneered bank building with gable roof Adapted from former gas station.
Public Square
- (C) LO-A-25 G. W. Davidson Banking
Company, 101 Public Square. c.
1878. Listed in the National Register October 29, 1982. Two-story brick commercial
building with parapet roof and entrance on the long side facing the square. First home of
the G. W. Davidson Banking Company, Auburn's earliest bank.
- (C) LO-A-24 Brick
Row, 103 Public Square. 1884; remodeled after fire
between 1900 and 1910. See #71, Retains early 20th century brick work in cornice area.
- (C) LO-A-23 Brick
Row, 105 Public Square. 1884; re- modeled after
fire between 1900 and 1910. See #71, Further remodeled in late 1930's or 1940's as movie
theater.
- (C) LO-A-22 Brick
Row, 107 Public Square, 1884. Remodeled after fire
between 1900 and 1910. See #71
- (C) LO-A-21 Brick
Row, 109 - III Public Square. 1884; remodeled after
fire between 1900 and 1910. One of a series of storefronts in Brick Row, a two-story brick
commercial block built in 1884 by G. W. Davidson. Remodeled as one-story commercial
buildings after early 20th century fire. Further remodeled in 1970's or 1980's with new
brick-veneered facade and new storefronts. Apartment addition at rear dates to l980's.
East Main Street
- (C) LO-A-19 G. W. Davidson and Co. Banking Building
#2, 101 East Main
street. c. 1875 - 1899. Remodeled as bank in 1926-1927. Originally two-story brick
commercial building with gable roof. In 1926-1927 second floor was removed and building
was veneered in buff-colored brick. Renaissance Revival detailing.
- (NC) Logan Telephone Coop,
Inc., 103 E. Main S., 1954. One-story
flat-roofed commercial structure with brick- veneered front facade.
- (C) LO-A-18 Auburn Hosiery Mills,
Inc., 113 E. Main Street. 1937.
One-story poured-concrete industrial facility with arched roof on rear factory area and
with two-story office block across front. Brick-veneered facade. Additions to east and
west sides date to late 1940's and 1950's. Factory built by city with encouragement of the
Auburn Industrial Foundation, founded about 1936 to encourage the cooperation of
government and industry to create new jobs.
- (C) LO-A-16 Coke
Chevrolet, 114 East Main Street. c. 1934. One-story
Art Modern-styled car dealership and garage with two-story office area at northeast
corner. Adapted in 1934 from earlier garage. Brick building with prominent rounded south
east comer. Faced on front with porcelain panels.
- (NC) LO-A-15 112 East Main Street. c. 1915
- (C) LO-A-14 Caldwell Lace Leather Company
#2, 110 East Main Street.
c. 1915. Two-story brick commercial building with parapet roof. One-story east side
addition dates to 1960's. Built to house hardware and implement business; by 1929 Caldwell
Lace Leather had expanded into building.
- (C) LO-A-13 Caldwell Lace Leather Company #
1, 108 East Main Street.
c. 1915. Small one-story brick commercial building with parapet roof. First home of
Caldwell Lace Leather Company, an important Auburn industry.
- (C) LO-A-12 106 East Main
Street, 1912. One-story brick commercial
building linked together with 102 and 104 East Main Street by blind-arched arcade.
- (C) LO-A- 11 Milton's Dry
Goods, 104 East Main street, 1912.
One-story brick commercial building linked together with 102 and 106 East Main Street by
blind-arched arcade. Extensively altered storefront.
- (C) LO-A-10 Aull and Co. Drug
Store, 102 E. Main St. 1912. One-story
brick commercial building linked together with 104 and 106 East Main Street by cornice
area detailed with blind-arched arcade. Retains most intact interior of commercial
buildings in Auburn. Aull and Co. was an important local business for many years.
West Main Street
- (C) LO-A-8 Bank of
Auburn, 102-104 West Main Street, 1905. One-story
brick bank building with adjoining two-story office. Recessed comer entrance, crenellated
parapet roof, and masonry and stonefront facade. One of the most intact and most
architecturally significant commercial buildings in Auburn.
- (C) LO-A-7 106 West Main
Street, c. 1915; c. 1919-1929. One-story
brick commercial building with cast-iron store front. East half dates to about 1915. West
half was added between 1919 and 1929. One of the most intact commercial buildings
remaining in Auburn.
- (C) LO-A-6 Wright
Hotel, 110 West Main Street. c. 1895; remodeled in
1926. Two-story brick hotel with Eastlake detailing (still in place in interior) that was
remodeled with a new three-story front section in 1926.
- (C) LO-A-5 Motion Picture
Theater, 114 West Main street. c.
1900-1919; 1930's. Two-story brick commercial building built as one-story structure to
house movie theater. Stuccoed front facade dates from time of second floor addition in
1930's.
- (C) LO-A-4 Auburn Chevrolet
Company, 116 West Main Street. c. 1925.
- (C) LO-A-3 Auburn Chevrolet
Company, 118 West Main Street. c. 1925.
Central unit of one-story brick garage building with stuccoed front facade.
- (C) LO-A-2 120 West Main
Street, c. 1925. West unit of one-story
brick Auburn Chevrolet Garage building. This section always functioned as a separate store
unit, housing a restaurant in its early days.
- (C) LO-A-1 Woodmen of the World
Building, 124 W. Main St. C.
1911-1918.
- (NC) Vacant lot on northwest comer of W. Main St. and Perkins
St.
Site of LO-39, a two-story T-plan house that was demolished during the 1980s.
- (C) LO-A-60
P.T. Neal House, 210 W. Main St. 1929. One-story masonry
brick house with Bungalow/Craftsman styling.
- (NC) Auburn Banking
Co., 218 W. Main St. c. 1968. One-story
brick-veneered bank building with a flat roof. Parking lots behind.
- (C) LO-A-59 Baptist Church
Parsonage, 306 W. Main St. 1937.
One-and-one-half-story brick-veneered house with simple English Cottage styling.
- (C) LO-A-58 Cumberland Presbyterian Church Parsonage 1&2, 314 W.
Main St. 1921. One-and-one-half-story brick - veneered Bungalow/Craftsman house.
- (C) LO-A-57 Cumberland Presbyterian
Church, 320 W. Main St. 1910.
Brick-veneered church with comer steeple. 1948 office building on cast side and 1960's
education building at rear.
- (NC) Minit Mart, 410 W. Main
St. 1993. One-story flat-roofed
brick-veneered commercial building set back from street in large blacktopped parking lot.
- (C) LO-A-56 B. D. Williams
House, 428 W. Main St. c. 1907. One-story
wood-framed house with unusual form combining T-plan and "Queen Anne cottage."
- (C) Chicken coop. 1930s, Wood-framed, shed-roofed, horizontal board
siding.
- (C) Garage. 1930s. Wood-framed with gable roof, weather- board
siding.
- (C) LO-A-55
McKenzie/Hamblin House, 434 W. Main St. c. 1907-1909.
One-story wood-framed "Queen Anne cottage" with 1920's brick Craftsman style
porch.
- (C) Chicken house. 1920's or 1930's. Wood-framed with gable roof,
tongue-and-grooved horizontal siding.
- (C) Smoke house. 1920's or 1930's. Wood-framed with gable roof,
vertical board siding.
- (C) Garage. 1920's or 1930's. Wood-framed with shed roof,
board-and-batten siding.
- (C) Enclosure for cow. 1920's or 1930's. Wood-framed with shed roof
and vertical board siding.
- (C) LO-A-54 Haden/McKenzie
House, 444 W. Main St. c. 1895-1907.
One-story wood-framed T-plan house. Front porch altered.
- (C-) LO-A-53 452 W. Main
St. 1915-1930. One-story wood-framed
Bungalow/Craftsman house.
- (C) LO-A-52 Robert Crabb
House, 462 W. Main St. 1900-1915; remodeled
in 1920s. One-story wood-framed gable-roofed house remodeled with Craftsman-style front
porch and dormer in 1920's.
- (C) Barn. c. 1920's or 1930's. Two-story wood-framed with gable roof
First floor finished with vertical boards; second with corrugated metal.
- (C) LO-A-51 George W. Wilson
house, 472 W. Main St. 188N. Two-story
wood-framed T-plan with 1920's Craftsman-style front porch. Rear ell of house may be
earlier house.
- (C) Smokehouse. c. 1880-1920. Wood-framed with gable roof and
weatherboard siding.
- (C) Barn. c. 1900-1925. Two-story wood-framed with gable roof and
tongue-and-groove horizontal board siding.
- (C) LO-A-50 M. J. Price house
#2, 480 W. Main St. c. 1905. One-story
wood-framed "Queen Anne cottage. " Rear additions.
- (C) LO-A-49 McCarley/Scott
house, 486 W. Main St. c. 1915-1925.
One-and-one-half-story wood-framed Bungalow/Craftsman house.
- (C) LO-A-48 Ray Scott
house, 488 W. Main St. 1928.
One-and-one-half-story masonry brick Bungalow/Craftsman house. Sun porch added on west
side in 1950's or 1960's.
- (NC) LO-A-47 494 W. Main
St. 1900-1915. One story wood-framed T-plan
house.
- (NC) 498 W. Main St.
1970's?
- (C) LO-A-46 Sam Miller
House, 506 W. Main St. 1938. One-and-one-half
story stone-veneered house with English Cottage styling. Historic stone retaining walls in
side yard surround blue hole. Excellent intact example of the stone- veneered houses
popular during the 1930's and 1940's in Auburn.
- (C) LO-A-45 Pace Neal
house, 514 W. Main St. c. 1885-1900. One-story
wood-framed T-plan house. Front porch removed. Rear additions.
- (C) Water tower/well house. 1900-1925. Tall, square wood- framed
structure with pyramidal roof and weatherboard siding.
- (C) LO-A-41 J. R. Baker
house, 507 W. Main St. 1938. One-story
stone-veneered house with suggestions of English Cottage styling.
- (C) LO-A-40 Methodist Church Parsonage
#2, 503 W. Main St. c.
1890-1910. One-story wood-framed T-plan house. Served as the Methodist parsonage for some
years.
- (C) LO-A-39 Johnston/Rogers
house, 497 W. Main St c. 1913. One-story
wood-framed house with "Southern pyramidal roof form.
- (NC) LO-A-38 Williams
House, 493 W. Main St. c. 1945. One-story
wood-framed House with Cape Cod massing.
- (C) LO-A-37
Bass/Phalan House, 487 W. Main St. c. 1880-1885.
One-story wood-framed T-plan with rear room added about 1900-1910. Front porch posts
replaced.
- (C) LO-A-36 S. J. T Lowe
House, 485 W. Main St. c. 1920. One-story
wood-framed Bungalow-Craftsman house.
- (C) Garage, 1920's or 1930's. Wood-fenced with gable roof.
- (C) LO-A-35 W. Y Moody
House, 477 W. Main St. 1918-1925.
One-and-one-half-story brick veneered Bungalow/Craftsman house.
- (C) LO-A-34 Dr. T. O. Helm
House, 467 W. Main St. 1894. One-story
wood-framed "Queen Anne cottage" with elaborately detailed wraparound porch.
Earliest and best remaining example of the "Queen Anne cottage" in Auburn. Built
for Dr. Helm, an important Auburn doctor and businessman.
- (C) LO-A-33
Clay/McDavitt house, 461 W. Main St. C. 1860-1886.
Two-story single-pile wood-framed house with central passage plan. Side-facing gable roof
has cross gable on west end. Rear additions. Vinyl siding.
- (NC) Garage. 1970s. Wood-framed.
- (C) LO-A-32 Mrs. M. J. Price house
#1, 453 W. Main St c. 1893
One-story wood-framed T-plan. Front porch screened in.
- (C) Garage. 1930's. Wood-framed with gable roof, tongue- and-groove
siding.
- (C) Garage. 1920's. Wood-framed with shed roof, vertical board
siding.
- (C) LO-A-31 Luther Wilson
house, 443 W. Main St. 1927.
One-and-one-half-story wood-framed Bungalow/Craftsman house. Front porch supports
replaced.
Wilson Avenue
- (C) LO-A-147 McCarley/Owens
house, 103 Wilson Ave. c. 1917-1922.
One-and-one-half-story wood-framed Bungalow/Crafts- man house.
- (C) Garage/shed. 1930s. Wood-framed with gable roof, vertical board
and shiplap siding.
- (C) LO-A-148
McCaricy/Moody house, 105 Wilson Ave. c. 1917-1922.
One-and-one-half-story wood-framed Bungalow/Craftsman house.
- (C) Garage. 1930's. Wood-framed with gable roof and shiplap siding.
- (C) LO-A-149 Boyce Herndon
house, 109 Wilson Ave. c. 1939.
One-and-one-half-story wood-framed house with simple English Cottage styling.
- (C) Small house adapted as garagetshed. 1920's. Wood-framed, T-plan
with tongue-and-groove siding.
- (C) LO-A-150 Claude Lancaster
house, 111 Wilson Ave. c. 1915-1925.
One-and-one-half-story wood-framed Bungalow/Crafts- man house. Vinyl siding.
- (C) LO-A-151 Washer
house, 201 Wilson Ave. c. 1915-1925.
One-and-one-half-story wood-framed Bungalow/Craftsman house.
- (NC) 203 Wilson
Avenue. 1960s? Small wood-framed house with Cape Cod
massing.
- (C) LO-A-152 Harold Lambrith
house, 205 Wilson Ave. c. 1915-1925.
One-and-one-half-story wood-framed Bungalow/Craftsman house.
- (C) LO-A-153 207 Wilson
Avenue. c. 1915-1925. One-and-one-half-story
wood-framed Bungalow/Crafts- man house. Aluminum siding.
- (C) Garage. 1930's. Wood-framed with gable roof, weatherboard siding.
- (C) LO-A-154 C. O. Waddle
house,211 Wilson Ave. c. 1915-1925.
One-and-one-half-story wood-framed Bungalow/Craftsman house. Side addition. Aluminum
siding.
- (C) Barn. 1920s. Wood-framed with gable roof and vertical board
siding.
- (NC) Garage. 1960's or 1970's. Wood-framed.
South Lincoln Street
- (C) LO-A-164 Auburn Mills,
Inc., 117 S. Lincoln St . c. 1875 with
numerous later additions. Two-and-one-half-story heavy-timber-frame grain mill and
two-story heavy-timber-frame granary with multiple additions including a 1950s corn mill
and warehouses built in the 1950's and 1966.
- (C) Grain bins and elevators. 1937-1960's. Poured concrete bins
dating from 1937 are surrounded by metal grain elevators constructed with steel plates.
- (C) LO-A-165 W. B. Woodward house Methodist Parsonage
#1, 221 S.
Lincoln St. c. 1860-1880. One-story single-pile wood-framed house with central-passage
plan and rear ell . Front porch may have been removed. Aluminum siding purchased for the
Methodist parsonage in 1885 and used for this purpose until 1906.
- (C) Servants' house? 1860-1900. Wood-framed with gable roof, window
in east side, and horizontal board siding.
Spring Street
- (C)LO-A-2O Dr. Freeman's Dentist
Office, 104 Spring Street. c. 1925.
Small free standing brick building with parapet roof, concrete trim.
Caldwell Street (formerly Depot Street)
- (C) LO-A-88 Dark Tobacco Growers Cooperative Association
Warehouse/Caldwell Lace Leather Company, 125 Caldwell Street. c. 1923. Large,
approximately 150' by 200', one-story masonry brick warehouse with parapet roof, concrete
detailing and metal frame. North side addition dating to c. 1975 is built of concrete
block with brick-veneered front. Constructed as tobacco warehouse and sold in 1933 to
Caldwell Lace Leather Company for use as factory.
Pearl Street
- (NC) 112 Pearl
Street. 1960's. One-story brick veneered
office/apartment building.
- (NC Site ) Vacant lot between 11 2 and 124 Pearl
Street. Site of the
Crewdson House, a wood-framed hotel built in the 1860's or 1870's.
- (C) LO-A-84 124 Pearl
Street. c. 1915-1925. One-and-one-half-story
wood-framed Bungalow/Craftsman house. Vinyl siding.
- (NC) LO-A-85 126 Pearl
Street. c. 1875-1890. One-story wood-framed
house of undetermined plan. Present front of house may have been original rear facade.
- (C) LO-A-86 Spencer and Hatcher Chyle
House, 132 Pearl
Street.
c. 1922-1930. Two-story wood-framed central-passage-plan single-pile house with one-story
full-width rear wing.
- (C) LO-A-87 136 Pearl
Street. c. 1915-1925. One-story wood-framed
Bungalow/Craftsman house. Front porch posts have been replaced.
- (NC site) Vacant lot between 136 and 146 Pearl
Street. Blacktopped
parking lot where small late 19th century wood-framed house was located until recently.
- (C) Garage. 1920's. Wood-framed with gable roof.
- (NC) 146 Pearl
Street. 1940's or 1950's. Small wood-framed house with
rectangular plan and front-facing gable roof.
- (NC) 148 Pearl
Street. 1920's? and 1970's. Extensively altered
wood-framed building with weatherboard and corrugated metal siding and gable roof. May
have been "coal office" indicated on 1929 Sanborn map.
- (NC) Also located on lot is 1970's pre-fabricated house.
- (C) LO-A-9 101-103 Pearl
Street. c. 1925. One-story brick commercial
building with two store units.
- (C) LO-A-80 115 Pearl
Street. c. 1942-1945. One-story stone-veneered
office/apartment building.
- (C) Garage. 1940's or 1950's. Wood-framed with shed roof.
- (NC) LO-A-81 W. S. Monroe
House, 117 Pearl Street. 1910's or 1920's.?
Small wood-framed house of undetermined date and plan that was extensively altered in 1948
and again in the 1980's following a fire. Vinyl siding.
- (NC) Garage. 1950's or 1960's.
- (C) LO-A-82 Dr. Adolphus Johnston
House, 123 Pearl Street. c.
1918-1920. One-and-one-half-story brick-veneered Bungalow/Craftsman house with side-facing
gable roof. The largest and most elaborately detailed Bungalow/Craftsman house in Auburn.
Built by Johnston, a partner with his father-in-law, A. S. Aull, in the Aull and Co.
drugstore. Rear additions.
- (C) Playhouse. 1930's, One-story wood-framed house.
- (C) Garage. 1920's. Wood-framed with weatherboard siding and gable
roof.
- Entrance gate posts. c. 1920. Stone piers with concrete caps.
- (NC) LO-A-83 A. S. Aull
House, 125 Pearl Street. c. 1885-1910;
remodeled in late 1940's. A one-story wood-framed T-plan house that was extensively
altered with the addition of a second projecting front wing and rear wings.
- (NC) Auburn Nursing
Center, 139 Pearl Street. 1964; addition 1975 Low
one-story flat-roofed brick-veneered building set in landscaped grounds.
Perkins Street (formerly Pond Street)
- (NC site) Vacant lot between alley and rear of 123 Pearl
St. Site of
city water tower from 1930's until 1980's.
- (NC) 144 Perkins Street. 1960's or
1970's. One-story wood-framed
house with side-facing gable roof.
- (NC) Garage. 1960's or 1970's.
- (NC) Auburn Nursing Center
Apartments, 148 Perkins Street, 1981.
One-story long, rectangular brick-veneered building with gable roof.
- (C) LO-A-79 Rogers/Perkins
House, 152 Perkins Street. c. 1905.
One-and-one-half-story wood-framed house with a central- passage plan and a saltbox
roofline at rear. Front porch posts replaced.
- (NC) Masonic
Lodge, 123 Perkins Street. 1951. Two-story
brick-veneered building with a parapet roof.
- (NC) 129 Perkins
Street. c. 1960. One-story wood-framed T-plan
variation with an attached carport.
- (NC) 143 Perkins
Street. c. 1960. One-story wood-framed house with
side-facing gable roof, recessed front porch, and attached carport.
- (NC) 145 Perkins
Street. 1970's. One-story wood-framed house with
side-facing gable roof.
- (NC) 147 Perkins
Street. 1960's? One-story brick-veneered house with
side-facing gable roof and small projecting bays at each end of front facade.
- (NC) Garage. 1960s wood-framed.
North Lincoln Street
- (NC) LO-A-78 John Gaines
House, 132 North Lincoln Street. 1937.
One-story wood-framed cottage with simple English Cottage styling. North side addition
dating from 1954 and 1987 south side sun porch addition significantly alter the form of
the house. Aluminum siding.
- (C) LO-A-77 W. W. and Mildred Parish
House, 138 North Lincoln Street.
1869-1879. One-story wood-framed house with single-pile central-passage-plan and
rear ell. Rear additions. One of the best-preserved examples of this house type in
Auburn.
- (C) LO-A-76
142 North Lincoln St. 1890-1910. One-story wood-framed
T-plan with intact front porch. Rear addition.
- (C) Root cellar. c. 1900-1940. Small square stone structure set into
ground, Gable roof.
- (C) Garage. 1920's or 1930's. Wood-framed with shed roof.
- (NC) Presbyterian
Manse, 148 North Lincoln St. 1957. One-story
brick-veneered house with Cape Cod influence.
- (C) LO-A-75 Dr. W. R. and Norma Burr
House, 156 North Lincoln Street.
c. 1901. One-and-one-half-story wood-framed house with front-facing gable roof and small
projecting front wing. Replacement porch supports. Vinyl siding.
- (C) Servants' house. c. 1900-1910. Wood-framed with gable roof,
windows, and interior end chimney.
- (C) LO-A-74 Dr. J. R. Simpson
House, 166 North Lincoln Street. 1920
s. One-and-one-half-story wood-framed Bungalow/Craftsman house with side-facing gable
roof. Brick-veneered about 1960. Built for Dr. Simpson who practiced medicine in Auburn.
- (C) Barn wood-framed with board-and-batten siding and gable roof.
1920's or 1930's.
- (NC) Auburn Baptist Church Education
Building, 103 North Lincoln
Street. 1949, remodeled in 1980s.
- (NC) Auburn Baptist
Church, 11 5 North Lincoln Street, 1988.
Brick-veneered Colonial Revival style church.
- (C) LO-A-66 J. H. and Fannie Monroe
House, 125 North Lincoln Street.
c. 1895-1900. One-story wood-framed "Queen Anne cottage" with hipped roof.
- (C) Barn. c. 1900-1920. Large one-story barn with heavy timber
frames, a gable roof, and metal cladding.
- (C) LO-A-67 J. S. Hurt
House, 135 North Lincoln Street. 1885-1900.
One-story wood-framed T-plan house with extensively detailed front porch. One of the most
elaborate and intact T-plan houses remaining in Auburn. J. S. Hurt was a carpenter and
probably built this house.
- (C) LO-A-68 Auburn Presbyterian
Church, 141 North Lincoln Street.
1932. Architect: Thomas Gardner of Nashville, TN. Small brick-veneered English
Revival-style church with a high stone-faced foundation and a red-tile roof.
- (C) LO-A-69 149 North Lincoln
Street. c. 1885-1900. One-story
wood-framed T-plan house with intact front porch. Rear addition.
- (C) LO-A-70 Darby-Lockett
House, 157 North Lincoln Street, 1895.
Two-story wood-framed T-plan house with intact two- story front porch.
- (C) LO-A-71 Waddle/McCarley
House, 163 North Lincoln Street. c.
1865-1884. Two-story single-pile wood-framed house with side-passage plan and one-story
rear ell. Two-story front porch added about 1900. The most intact example of this house
plan remaining in Auburn.
- (C) LO-A-72 Coghill/Herndon/Price
House, 167 North Lincoln Street. c.
1878. One-story double-pile wood-framed house with hipped roof and five-room, no hall
plan.
- (C) LO-A-73 A. D. Monroe
House, 171 North Lincoln Street. 1939.
One-story Spanish Eclectic style house. Originally stuccoed; brick veneered in 1976.
Crenellated roofline and front porch with round-arched openings still provide sense of
Spanish stylistic influence.
Maple Street
- (C) LO-A- 104 L. A. Freeman
House, 614 Maple St. c. 1885. Two-story
wood-framed T-plan house with rear ell. Present two-story front porch is replacement of
original one-story porch. Rear additions. L. A. Freeman, first owner, was a prosperous
Logan County farmer who moved into Auburn.
- (NC) LO-A-103 Charles V. Hanks
House, 610 Maple Street. c. 1942.
Small one-story wood-framed house with a variation on a Cape Cod form and slight
references to English Cottage styling.
- (C) LO-A-102 A. F. Coghill
House, 604 Maple St. c. 1884. One-story
wood-framed single-pile house with central-passage plan, rear ell, and simple Italianate
detailing. Rear two- story addition.
- (C) LO-A-101 508 Maple
Street. c. 1900-1915. One-story wood-framed
house with side-facing gable roof, four rooms and no central hall. Simple Bungalow/Crafts
man styling probably added in 1920's.
- (C) LO-A- 100 Snodgrass/Hutcheson
House, 504 Maple Street. c.
1875-1885. Two-story single-pile house with central-passage plan and one-story rear ell.
Gable roof, wood-framed. Front porch has been altered.
- (C) Garage/shed. 1930's. Wood-framed, weatherboard siding, gable
roof.
- (C) LO-A-99 Samuel Price
House, 414 Maple Street. c. 1865-1870.
Two-story single-pile central-passage-plan house with rear ell. Gable roof, wood-framed.
Two-story front portico, columns outside to support porch, Southern Colonial influence.
Interior retains nearly all its original finishes and provides valuable information about
1860s materials and workmanship in Auburn
- (C) LO-A-98 Dr. William Burr
House, 408 Maple Street. c. 1894-1898.
Two-story single-pile central-passage-plan house with one- story wing across back and
elaborate Eastlake-style two- story recessed front porch. Vinyl siding. Home of Dr.
William Burr, a local physician, from 1907 to 1926.
- (C)Smokehouse. c. 1900. Wood-framed with gable roof and weatherboard
siding.
- (C)Servants' house. c. 1900. Wood-framed with gable roof, windows,
and weatherboard siding.
- (NC) LO-A-97 E. B. and Dorothy Perkins
House, 402 Maple street, 1940.
One-story wood-framed house with front facing gable roof.
- (C) Garage. c. 1940. Wood-framed with gable roof and weatherboard
siding.
- (C) LO-A-96 V. R. Van Arsdall
House, 326 Maple Street. c. 1929.
One-story brick-veneered Bungalow/Craftsman style house with a front-facing gable roof.
Rear addition.
- (C) LO-A-95 R. B. Meyers
House, 322 Maple Street. c. 1915-1925.
One-story wood-framed Bungalow/Craftsman style house with side-facing gable roof. Aluminum
siding.
- (C) LO-A-94 J. W. Smith
House, 314 Maple St. c. 1872-1880. Two-story
wood-framed T-plan house with ltalianate detailing. Front porch posts on both levels
replaced with metal supports. Rear addition. J. W. Smith, an influential Auburn resident,
began in the dry goods business and then became a very successful traveling salesman.
- (C) LO-A-93 W. I. and Annie Freeman
House, 304 Maple Street. c.
1906-1908. One-story wood-framed "Queen Anne cottage" with cross gable roof.
Rear additions. Aluminum siding. Built for Annie Smith Freeman, daughter of J. W. Smith,
and her husband, W. I. Freeman, a dentist in Auburn, on a corner of her family's property.
- (C) Barn. 1920's or 1930's. Wood-framed with gable roof and
board-and-batten siding.
- (NC) LO-A-92 220 Maple
Street. c. 1890-1910, One-story wood-framed
T-plan House. Enclosed sun porch added to east end considerably alters form of house.
Front porch supports replaced. Aluminum siding.
Walnut Street
- (NC) 101 Walnut
Street. 1930's or 1940's. Simple one-story
wood-framed house with rectangular form, hip roofed front porch, and front-facing gable
roof.
Viers Street
- (C) LO-A-105 120 Viers
Street. 1860's or 1870's. One-and-
one-half-story wood-framed hall-and-parlor-plan house with gable-roofed wall dormers on
front facade. Front porch remodeled.
- (NC) 121 Viers
Street. 1970's? Small one-story wood-framed house with
side-facing gable roof.
- (C) LO-A-106 Auburn Christian
Church, 123 Viers Street. c. 1871.
Extremely intact small wood-framed church with nave plan, front-facing gable roof, and
weatherboard siding. Single front entrance is in east end. An excellent example of the
church property type discussed in the nomination.
- (C) LO-A-107 John Viers
House, 239 Viers Street. 1820's?; c.
1840-1860. Two-story central-passage single-pile wood-framed house dating from between
1840 and 1860 with a one-story rear ell, probably once a free-standing house, dating from
the 1820's. The rear ell was built by the Shakers from South Union who purchased this
property in 1813. Present two-story front portico dates from 1930's or 1940's. John Viers
purchased the property from the Shakers in 1838 and in 1860 subdivided some of the land
for the town of Auburn. Viers is thought to have built the front of the house between 1838
and 1860, perhaps on the foundation of an earlier Shaker structure. Architecturally and
historically one of the most significant buildings remaining in Auburn.
- (C) Barn/corn crib/shed pre-1850? Heavy timber frame, gable roof,
weatherboard siding, central unloading area.
(C) Contributing historical places within the district.
(NC) Non-contributing buildings, but they are within the historic
district.