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- Q20966504 subject Q15280696.
- Q20966504 subject Q8515417.
- Q20966504 abstract "The Tuscumbia Historic District is a historic district in Tuscumbia, Alabama. The district contains 461 contributing properties and covers about 232 acres (94 ha) of the town's original area. The first white settlers in Tuscumbia built a village next to Big Spring, at the site of what is today Spring Park. Many settlers, many from Virginia and Maryland, began to emigrate to The Shoals in the 1820s and 1830s. The oldest houses in the district are Tidewater-type cottages, a style native to the Middle Atlantic. Also built during the town's early period are some of the oldest commercial buildings in Alabama, including the Morgan-Donilan Building (built 1825) and a seven-building block known as Commercial Row (built in the mid-1830s). The town's economy declined in the 1840s, when many farmers left seeking more fertile soil, through the Civil War and Reconstruction.Recovery came in the 1880s and 1890s, driven by industrial development in neighboring Sheffield. The majority of commercial buildings date from the 1880s through the 1930s, while residential buildings of the period display styles such as Queen Anne, Folk Victorian, Bungalow, and Tudor Revival. Other notable buildings in the district include the Colbert County Courthouse, built in 1909; St. John's Episcopal Church, built in 1852 as one of the earliest Carpenter Gothic churches in Alabama; and Deshler Stadium, a Works Projects Administration project completed in 1941.The district was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.".
- Q20966504 added "1985-05-23".
- Q20966504 area "938870.6899968".
- Q20966504 location Q79606.
- Q20966504 nrhpReferenceNumber "85001158".
- Q20966504 thumbnail First_Baptist_Church_of_Tuscumbia,_former_building.jpg?width=300.
- Q20966504 wikiPageWikiLink Q1129142.
- Q20966504 wikiPageWikiLink Q1200079.
- Q20966504 wikiPageWikiLink Q1370.
- Q20966504 wikiPageWikiLink Q1391.
- Q20966504 wikiPageWikiLink Q15280696.
- Q20966504 wikiPageWikiLink Q1620797.
- Q20966504 wikiPageWikiLink Q3719.
- Q20966504 wikiPageWikiLink Q4365410.
- Q20966504 wikiPageWikiLink Q5060199.
- Q20966504 wikiPageWikiLink Q5460833.
- Q20966504 wikiPageWikiLink Q565165.
- Q20966504 wikiPageWikiLink Q623429.
- Q20966504 wikiPageWikiLink Q7270218.
- Q20966504 wikiPageWikiLink Q7851317.
- Q20966504 wikiPageWikiLink Q79568.
- Q20966504 wikiPageWikiLink Q79606.
- Q20966504 wikiPageWikiLink Q850107.
- Q20966504 wikiPageWikiLink Q8515417.
- Q20966504 wikiPageWikiLink Q8676.
- Q20966504 added "1985-05-23".
- Q20966504 location "Roughly bounded by N. & E. Commons, Eight St. and Spring Rd., Hooks, W. 5th & S. Milton including Steel Bridge, Tuscumbia, Alabama".
- Q20966504 name "Tuscumbia Historic District".
- Q20966504 refnum "85001158".
- Q20966504 point "34.73305555555555 -87.69916666666667".
- Q20966504 type LandmarksOrHistoricalBuildings.
- Q20966504 type Place.
- Q20966504 type HistoricPlace.
- Q20966504 type Location.
- Q20966504 type Place.
- Q20966504 type Thing.
- Q20966504 type SpatialThing.
- Q20966504 comment "The Tuscumbia Historic District is a historic district in Tuscumbia, Alabama. The district contains 461 contributing properties and covers about 232 acres (94 ha) of the town's original area. The first white settlers in Tuscumbia built a village next to Big Spring, at the site of what is today Spring Park. Many settlers, many from Virginia and Maryland, began to emigrate to The Shoals in the 1820s and 1830s.".
- Q20966504 label "Tuscumbia Historic District".
- Q20966504 lat "34.73305555555555".
- Q20966504 long "-87.69916666666667".
- Q20966504 depiction First_Baptist_Church_of_Tuscumbia,_former_building.jpg.
- Q20966504 name "Tuscumbia Historic District".