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| Wilson
Chapel (1917)
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| Built
in the Craftsman style, this small brown brick chapel is reminiscent
of rural England's medieval churches. It was built by Minerva
Wilson Constantine and Rosa Wilson Eubanks to adjoin and protect
the Wilson family cemetery, established in 1838. The property
was deeded to the Methodist Episcopal church South in James
Wilson's will, dated February 19, 1895. The first service
was held East Sunday, 1917. The first grave, that of Audley
Hamilton, is dated 1838, and the cemetery is till used by
his descendants.
Located at one of
the main entrances to Roebuck Springs, the Chapel is set on
a triangular, fieldstone-edged terrace. It served as a community
Sunday School during WWII, and over the years has served as
a wedding chapel for people of diverse faiths. One Palm Sunday,
1955, it was dedicated as the Wilson Chapel Methodist church.
The original hand-hewn oak pews, with a Maltese Cross carved
at the ends, are still used today.
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| Gabrella Manor (1938)
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| This Spanish Colonial Revival
home was originally designed and decorated by a Dallas architect
and an artist commissioned by the first owner, Robert C. Bundy.
The estate is approximately five acres, with the two-story brick
house sporting a terra cotta tile roof. The entryway is turreted,
and there are multiple patios and terraces surrounding the house.
Interior feature include: large rooms designed for entertaining;
multiple murals and original stained glass windows reflecting
a Spanish theme; textured walls; a grand staircase; a bedroom
balcony overlooking the living room; many arches and columns;
tile flooring and original tile scenes accenting the fireplaces.
Today, the house remains a restored Birmingham landmark. Current
resident and owner Brenda Jones has renamed the estate Gabrella
Manor in honor of her grandmother. The house sits
at the outer edge of the Roebuck Springs Historic District and
is used as a meeting place for events such as weddings, receptions
and anniversaries. |
| Mewborne
- Sutherland House (1929)
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| This two-story
brick, stucco and half timber Tudor Revival home was built
by William P. Merborne, a machinist-pattern maker turned builder-contractor.
Mewborne built this home as his own residence.
A fieldstone wall defines the
property line at the road and is expertly graded to the multi-acre
site. Square pillars mark the auto entry to the tear-shaped
driveway, and there are fieldstone terraced walkways and garden
plots as well as a fieldstone barbecue pit on the grounds.
Of special interest is the sunken garden with two goldfish
ponds.
Interior features include a large
formal living room, sun porch, double staircase to the second
floor, and a private open porch off a bedroom on the second
floor. Original windows, doors, trim, light fixtures and heavily
detailed plaster walls are found throughout this elegant home.
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| Ryan
House (1929)
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| This one-story
brick Tudor Revival bungalow was one of the last homes built
in Roebuck Springs before the Depression brought development
to a halt. Rudd Wylie Ryan, the first owner, was a foreman
and template maker for the Virginia Bridge and Iron Company
who had "moved up" from Wahouma.
The house appears much larger
than it is, thanks to its perch on a hill across from Wilson
Chapel. The side terrace and dining nook overlook Wilson Springs,
affectionately know in years past as "Dr. Wood's swimming
pool", the source of the area's water supply until 1923
when city water arrived.
The home contains many original
features, including picturesque terra cotta chimney pots,
oak floors, rough plaster walls, archways, cedar-lined closets,
and a hand-hewn stone fire-place mantel. The current owner
has added period light fixtures, and some wonderful craftsman
details can be found in a recent kitchen renovation.
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| Ratchford-Truss
House (1925)
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| This
two-story clapboard, Dutch Colonial Revival has symmetrical
wings and a column-supported, pedimented entryway. The house
is situated on a little under three acres with extensive fieldstone
retaining walls, flagstone walkways, terraces, a flagstone
barbecue pit and the remains of foundations of previous buildings.
There is a detached garage, and two small pedestrian bridges
that cross a wet weather creek.
The interior is
open and designed for entertaining. Features include arched
doorways, high ceilings, white oak hardwood floors, original
light fixtures & door hardware, a stone fireplace in the
living room, and the original ice chute door in the kitchen.
The traditional furnishing include family antiques and heirlooms.
In the past, the home was the
'Trusswood" piano studio, where Mr. Ida Truss groomed
hundreds of young pianists. Mrs. Truss reportedly had a piano
in every room. Many people have hared memories of their childhood
piano lessons at Trusswood. One person even remembers getting
his first kiss (by several girls) in this home.
Many of the music instructors
hired by Mrs. Truss were boarded in the Carson house across
the street.
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| LaRoche-Gottlieb-Carson
House (1915)
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| Edwin B. LaRoche,
a 30-year old Cornell-educated architect, designed and built
this, his home, in 1915. LaRoche, his wife Julia and their
son moved from a southside address to distant Roebuck Springs,
some eight miles from LaRoche's downtown office. The home,
like many in the neighborhood, was constructed with materials
available locally such as fieldstone (used in the foundation,
chimneys and porches), hardwoods and heart pine. However,
with design elements of American Craftsman, mountain chalet,
and Wright's emerging philosophy of incorporation with the
land, the home is distinctive from the English-styled historical
homes that predominate here.
The original home included the
present kitchen, dining room, living with with hallway to
the rear, two bedrooms, a small nursery (Julia was pregnant
at the time), inside bath, a rear porch (now enclosed as the
mudroom), and a single driveway at the corner of Valley and
Horner, marked by the fieldstone gate. The outbuildings, including
a garage and servant's quarters may not have been original
but were in place by 1930. The two-acre estate has exposed
limestone boulders and a great diversity of flora.
The spirit of the home was aptly
personified by the Gottlieb family, residents for over 35
years. "Gotti", a book merchant who immigrated to
the U.S. as a child, and "Mitzi", a nurse from a
large family in Washington, D.C. raised their son Paul here,
hosted neighborhood teas during war rationing, filled the
house with music and live performance, filled the yard with
a sea of daffodils (now mostly covered by the second driveway)
and fed, housed, and entertained countless friends and strangers. |
Prosch-Bagby House (1928)
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This Tudor Revival home is
red brick with stone accents, has a porte-cochere and side
porch, along with many English Arts and Crafts features. It
is the third house on the site after fire destroyed the first
two. Accentuated stone retaining walls, original steps and
entrance pillars were built by John Miles, a servant of the
James Kirtley family who lived on the property from 1913 until
1923. The grounds are home to an impressive oak tree that
is over 100 years old.
The Kirtley-Bagby School House
sits at the rear of the property and is thought to pre-date
the current structure (it did not burn). It was once a private
neighborhood school, and has also been used as a nursery and
garage apartment. It currently serves as a guest house and
contains the owner's collection of 1940's and 1950's memorabilia.
The adjacent rose garden was redesigned in its original location.
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| This two-story Tudor Revival brick
house with stone inlay was built by James A. Thomas. After the
original owners, the Mortons, lost the house in the Depression,
it was owned by the Harry Austin family. Austin was a
retired executive of General Motors in Detroit. His wife
was responsible for much of the landscaping that remains today.
Later, the house was the long-time residence of local historian
Mildred Hearn. The interior features a sunroom with arched
windows overlooking the formal English garden. The
two-acre lot is landscaped in the English country style, and
features fieldstone retaining walls at Ridge Road, stone walkways
and steps, a dry stone grape arbor, and a formal garden with
limestone walks and a stone bench. There are vegetable,
rose, perennial, herb and shade gardens, as well as thousands
or daffodils. |
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