- National Register of Historic Places listings in Greenville, South Carolina
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This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Greenville, South Carolina.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Greenville, South Carolina, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in a map.[1]
There are 69 properties and districts listed on the National Register in Greenville County. The city of Greenville is the location of 39 of these properties and districts; they are listed here, while the 30 properties and districts in the remaining parts of the county are listed separately. Another 3 properties in Greenville were once listed but have been removed.
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- This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted November 10, 2011.[2]
Current listings
[3] Landmark name[4] Image Date listed Location Summary 1 Hugh Aiken House April 11, 2003 1 Parkside Dr.
34°52′36″N 82°23′26″W / 34.87667°N 82.39056°W2 Allen Temple A.M.E. Church April 16, 2010 109 Green Ave. at junction with S. Markley St.
34°50′29.69″N 82°24′32.66″W / 34.8415806°N 82.4090722°W -->3 American Cigar Factory July 1, 1982 E. Ct. St.
34°50′54″N 82°23′56″W / 34.84833°N 82.39889°W4 Fountain Fox Beattie House October 9, 1974 N. Church St.
34°51′10″N 82°23′40″W / 34.85278°N 82.39444°W5 Broad Margin December 8, 1978 9 W. Avondale Dr.
34°52′23″N 82°23′26″W / 34.87306°N 82.39056°W6 Brushy Creek October 6, 1999 327 Rice St.
34°48′35″N 82°23′30″W / 34.80972°N 82.39167°W7 Carolina Supply Company July 3, 1997 35 W. Court St.
34°50′55″N 82°24′5″W / 34.84861°N 82.40139°W8 Chamber of Commerce Building July 1, 1982 130 S. Main St.
34°50′53″N 82°24′0″W / 34.84806°N 82.4°W9 Christ Church (Episcopal) and Churchyard May 6, 1971 10 N. Church St.
34°51′3″N 82°23′40″W / 34.85083°N 82.39444°W10 Davenport Apartments July 1, 1982 400-402 E. Washington St.
34°50′57″N 82°23′44″W / 34.84917°N 82.39556°W11 T.Q. Donaldson House September 4, 1980 412 Crescent Ave.
34°49′54″N 82°23′43″W / 34.83167°N 82.39528°W12 Downtown Baptist Church August 16, 1977 101 W. McBee Ave.
34°51′9″N 82°24′9″W / 34.8525°N 82.4025°W13 Earle Town House August 5, 1969 107 James St.
34°51′49″N 82°24′24″W / 34.86361°N 82.40667°W14 Col. Elias Earle Historic District July 1, 1982 Earle, James, N. Main, and Rutherford Sts.
34°51′47″N 82°24′6″W / 34.86306°N 82.40167°W15 East Park Historic District October 4, 2005 Roughly bounded by East Park Ave., Bennett St., Harcourt Dr., and Rowley St.
34°51′30″N 82°23′30″W / 34.85833°N 82.39167°W16 First National Bank December 21, 1989 102 S. Main St.
34°50′57″N 82°24′40″W / 34.84917°N 82.41111°W17 Gilfillin and Houston Building June 9, 2004 217-219 E. Washington St.
34°51′0″N 82°23′48″W / 34.85°N 82.39667°W18 Greenville County Courthouse April 7, 1994 130 S. Main St.
34°50′55″N 82°24′2″W / 34.84861°N 82.40056°W19 Greenville Gas and Electric Light Company July 1, 1982 211 E. Broad St.
34°50′47″N 82°23′47″W / 34.84639°N 82.39639°W20 Hampton-Pinckney Historic District December 12, 1977 Hampton Ave. and Pinckney St. between Butler Ave. and Lloyd St.; also Hampton, Lloyd, and Hudson Sts. and Butler and Asbury Aves.
34°51′22″N 82°24′21″W / 34.85611°N 82.40583°WSecond set of boundaries represents a boundary increase of July 1, 1982 21 Imperial Hotel September 12, 1985 201 W. Washington St.
34°51′5″N 82°24′7″W / 34.85139°N 82.40194°W22 Isaqueena July 1, 1982 106 DuPont Dr.
34°51′43″N 82°22′25″W / 34.86194°N 82.37361°W23 Josiah Kilgore House April 28, 1975 N. Church and Academy Sts.
34°51′18″N 82°23′31″W / 34.855°N 82.39194°W24 Lanneau-Norwood House July 1, 1982 417 Belmont Ave.
34°49′58″N 82°23′34″W / 34.83278°N 82.39278°W25 Mills Mill July 1, 1982 Mills and Guess Sts.
34°49′40″N 82°24′38″W / 34.82778°N 82.41056°W26 Parker High School Auditorium February 26, 1996 900 Woodside Ave.
34°51′33″N 82°24′56″W / 34.85917°N 82.41556°W27 Pettigru Street Historic District July 1, 1982 Pettigru, Whitsett, Williams, Manly, E. Washington, Broadus, Toy, and Boyce Sts.
34°51′0″N 82°23′23″W / 34.85°N 82.38972°W28 Poinsett Hotel July 1, 1982 120 S. Main St.
34°50′55″N 82°24′2″W / 34.84861°N 82.40056°W29 Reedy River Falls Historic Park and Greenway April 23, 1973 Both banks of the Reedy River from the falls to Church St.; also roughly bounded by S. Main and Church Sts. and Camperdown Way
34°50′40″N 82°24′4″W / 34.84444°N 82.40111°WSecond set of boundaries represents a boundary increase of November 17, 1978 30 Reedy River Industrial District February 14, 1979 Along the Reedy River between River St. and Camperdown Way
34°50′48″N 82°24′6″W / 34.84667°N 82.40167°W31 Richland Cemetery October 4, 2005 Hilly St. and Sunflower St.
34°51′19″N 82°23′41″W / 34.85528°N 82.39472°W32 Springwood Cemetery October 4, 2005 Main St. and Elford St.
34°51′17″N 82°23′35″W / 34.85472°N 82.39306°W33 Stradley and Barr Dry Goods Store June 24, 2008 14 S. Main St.
34°51′2.17″N 82°23′56.58″W / 34.8506028°N 82.39905°W34 John Wesley Methodist Episcopal Church January 20, 1978 101 E. Court St.
34°50′52″N 82°23′55″W / 34.84778°N 82.39861°W35 West End Commercial Historic District January 7, 1993 Roughly the junction of Pendleton, River, Augusta, and S. Main Sts. and east along Main to Camperdown Way; also 631 S. Main St.
34°50′40″N 82°24′16″W / 34.84444°N 82.40444°W631 S. Main represents a boundary increase of May 29, 1998 36 Whitehall August 5, 1969 310 W. Earle St.
34°51′50″N 82°24′8″W / 34.86389°N 82.40222°W37 Williams-Earle House July 1, 1982 319 Grove Rd.
34°49′25″N 82°24′16″W / 34.82361°N 82.40444°W38 Working Benevolent Temple and Professional Building July 1, 1982 Broad and Fall Sts.
34°50′50″N 82°23′56″W / 34.84722°N 82.39889°W39 C. Granville Wyche House September 2, 1993 2900 Augusta Rd.
34°48′46″N 82°23′3″W / 34.81278°N 82.38417°WFormer listings
Landmark name Image Dates Location Summary 1 Cherrydale December 8, 2006 (delisted) 1500 Poinsett Highway Moved to Furman University 2 Greenville City Hall August 19, 1971
January 1, 1973 (delisted)Main and Broad Streets Demolished in 1972. 3 Old Textile Hall March 15, 2000 (delisted) 322 West Washington Street Demolished See also
- List of National Historic Landmarks in South Carolina
- National Register of Historic Places listings in South Carolina
References
- ^ The latitude and longitude information provided in this table was derived originally from the National Register Information System, which has been found to be fairly accurate for about 99% of listings. For about 1% of NRIS original coordinates, experience has shown that one or both coordinates are typos or otherwise extremely far off; some corrections may have been made. A more subtle problem causes many locations to be off by up to 150 yards, depending on location in the country: most NRIS coordinates were derived from tracing out latitude and longitudes off of USGS topographical quadrant maps created under the North American Datum of 1927, which differs from the current, highly accurate WGS84 GPS system used by Google maps. Chicago is about right, but NRIS longitudes in Washington are higher by about 4.5 seconds, and are lower by about 2.0 seconds in Maine. Latitudes differ by about 1.0 second in Florida. Some locations in this table may have been corrected to current GPS standards.
- ^ "National Register of Historic Places: Weekly List Actions". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved on November 10, 2011.
- ^ Numbers represent an ordering by significant words. Various colorings, defined here, differentiate National Historic Landmark sites and National Register of Historic Places Districts from other NRHP buildings, structures, sites or objects.
- ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. 2009-03-13. http://nrhp.focus.nps.gov/natreg/docs/All_Data.html.
U.S. National Register of Historic Places in South Carolina Lists by county Abbeville • Aiken • Allendale • Anderson • Bamberg • Barnwell • Beaufort • Berkeley • Calhoun • Charleston • Cherokee • Chester • Chesterfield • Clarendon • Colleton • Darlington • Dillon • Dorchester • Edgefield • Fairfield • Florence • Georgetown • Greenville • Greenwood • Hampton • Horry • Jasper • Kershaw • Lancaster • Laurens • Lee • Lexington • Marion • Marlboro • McCormick • Newberry • Oconee • Orangeburg • Pickens • Richland • Saluda • Spartanburg • Sumter • Union • Williamsburg • York
Lists by city Other lists Categories:- National Register of Historic Places in Greenville, South Carolina
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