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- Q19720489 subject Q15968313.
- Q19720489 subject Q8389961.
- Q19720489 subject Q8525396.
- Q19720489 subject Q8526391.
- Q19720489 subject Q8664972.
- Q19720489 subject Q8707629.
- Q19720489 subject Q8797710.
- Q19720489 abstract "The Davis C. Cooper House is a historic residence in Oxford, Alabama. The house was built by Davis Clay Cooper in 1911. Cooper was an prominent local business leader, starting in his father's mercantile business, later became the president of the Bank of Oxford, and was instrumental in establishing the Blue Springs Cotton Mill and the Oxford Oil Mill, as well as other business ventures. He also served on the city councils of Oxanna (before it merged into Anniston), Anniston, and Oxford, the board of education of Oxford, and was mayor of Oxford for 20 years. The house passed to Cooper's daughter, Annie, upon his death in 1943, and was sold out of the family in the 1970s.The house is built in a restrained Colonial Revival style, one of few large-scale examples of the style in Oxford. The two-story house has a truncated hipped roof with exposed rafter ends. The main block of the house is three bays wide, with a one-story entry portico supported by two groups of three columns. The front door has twelve panes of glass, and is surrounded by multi-light sidelights and a transom. The portico is flanked by a grouping of three windows, one six-over-one sash window surrounded by two four-over-one sashes, on each side. A similar grouping of casement windows sits above the portico, while the outer bays of the second story feature pairs of six-over-one sashes. On the south (right) of the façade is a one-stoy sunroom topped with a deck. The interior plan is irregular, with rooms surrounding a central stair hall. Interior details are a blend of Colonial Revival and Late Victorian features. Also contributing to the property are a recreation building (which contains a bowling alley used by the adjacent Baptist church), garage, and gazebo.The house was listed on the Alabama Register of Landmarks and Heritage in 2003 and the National Register of Historic Places in 2005.".
- Q19720489 added "2005-08-12".
- Q19720489 architecturalStyle Q5148367.
- Q19720489 area "4046.8564224".
- Q19720489 location Q79358.
- Q19720489 nrhpReferenceNumber "05000835".
- Q19720489 thumbnail Davis_C._Cooper_House_April_2014_3.jpg?width=300.
- Q19720489 wikiPageWikiLink Q15968313.
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- Q19720489 wikiPageWikiLink Q79358.
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- Q19720489 wikiPageWikiLink Q8389961.
- Q19720489 wikiPageWikiLink Q8525396.
- Q19720489 wikiPageWikiLink Q8526391.
- Q19720489 wikiPageWikiLink Q8664972.
- Q19720489 wikiPageWikiLink Q8707629.
- Q19720489 wikiPageWikiLink Q8797710.
- Q19720489 wikiPageWikiLink Q961082.
- Q19720489 yearOfConstruction "1911".
- Q19720489 added "2005-08-12".
- Q19720489 architecture "Colonial Revival".
- Q19720489 location "301".
- Q19720489 name "Davis C. Cooper House".
- Q19720489 refnum "5000835".
- Q19720489 point "33.61694444444444 -85.83416666666666".
- Q19720489 type LandmarksOrHistoricalBuildings.
- Q19720489 type Place.
- Q19720489 type HistoricPlace.
- Q19720489 type Location.
- Q19720489 type Place.
- Q19720489 type Thing.
- Q19720489 type SpatialThing.
- Q19720489 comment "The Davis C. Cooper House is a historic residence in Oxford, Alabama. The house was built by Davis Clay Cooper in 1911. Cooper was an prominent local business leader, starting in his father's mercantile business, later became the president of the Bank of Oxford, and was instrumental in establishing the Blue Springs Cotton Mill and the Oxford Oil Mill, as well as other business ventures.".
- Q19720489 label "Davis C. Cooper House".
- Q19720489 lat "33.61694444444444".
- Q19720489 long "-85.83416666666666".
- Q19720489 depiction Davis_C._Cooper_House_April_2014_3.jpg.
- Q19720489 name "Davis C. Cooper House".