Historical Marker Search

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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1UTZ_past-and-promise-historical_Asheville-NC.html
Until electricity was introduced in the late 1880s, gas and kerosene lamps provided lighting in Public Square—now Pack Square. Horse-head fountains, fed from a reservoir on Beaucatcher Mountain, were affixed to lampposts at the east and west…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1UTY_the-block-historical_Asheville-NC.html
Eagle Street traditionally has been the commercial, cultural, and professional center of the African-American community. The YMI Cultural Center, commissioned by George W. Vanderbilt in 1892 as the Young Men's Institute, was renovated in the 1980s…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1UTX_brick-artisan-historical_Asheville-NC.html
James Vester Miller was chief brickmason for the 1925 Municipal Building. The cornucopias over the side doorway mark the entrance to the City Market, located there from 1926 to 1932. Of slave parentage, Miller achieved renown as a craftsman, contr…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1UTW_walk-into-history-historical_Asheville-NC.html
The Urban Trail, a self-guided walk through historic downtown, begins here at the heart of the city, the public square. Philanthropist George Willis Pack, for whom the square was named in 1903, gave generously to the entire community. So too, the …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1UTV_the-early-years-in-ashevilles-historic-central-square-historical_Asheville-NC.html
Buncombe County was carved out of a magnificent mountain landscape etched by indigenous trails and scattered settlements. The bill creating the county was ratified on January 14, 1792. In 1793, the county's first official courthouse, a jail and…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1UTU_ellingtons-dream-historical_Asheville-NC.html
In 1926 Asheville and Buncombe County officials considered erecting matching government buildings on Court Plaze. The city chose Douglas Ellington's Beaux-Art design with its Art Deco embellishments. The county, however, rejected Ellington's plan …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1U7U_immortal-image-historical_Asheville-NC.html
Reminiscent of Asheville's Victorian past, the Drhumor Building across Church Street was built in 1895 by William J. Cocke and family. Fred Miles, Biltmore Hourse sculptor, carved the limestone frieze. Immortalized in stone is on the east side is …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1U7S_monument-corner-historical_Asheville-NC.html
W.O. Wolfe's tombstone shop, fondly recalled by his son, Thomas in Look Homeward Angel, once stood on this corner. During the boom of the 1920s, real estate developer L.B. Jackson purchased the property from Julia Westall Wolfe and built Asheville…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1U7R_stepping-out-historical_Asheville-NC.html
The coming of the railroad and tuberculosis sanitariums in the 1880s prompted a population explosion in Asheville. On Patton Avenue the Grand Central Hotel opened circa 1880 and the Grand Opera House in 1890. Later, vaudeville and motion picture t…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1U7O_crossroads-historical_Asheville-NC.html
Native American trails guided settlers to this site, where in 1793 the Buncombe County Court placed the first courthouse, prison, and stocks. With the opening of the Buncombe Turnpike in 1827, this public square became a crossroads for stagecoach …
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