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Lenoir High School

1922 establishments in North CarolinaBuildings and structures in Caldwell County, North CarolinaHigh schools in North CarolinaHistoric districts on the National Register of Historic Places in North CarolinaNRHP infobox with nocat
National Register of Historic Places in Caldwell County, North CarolinaNeoclassical architecture in North CarolinaSchool buildings completed in 1922School buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in North CarolinaUse mdy dates from August 2023Western North Carolina Registered Historic Place stubs
LenoirHighSchool
LenoirHighSchool

Lenoir High School is a historic high school complex and national historic district located at Lenoir, Caldwell County, North Carolina. It was designed by the architectural firm Benton & Benton and built in 1922. It is a two-story, Classical Revival-style brick school with cast stone detailing. An addition was made in 1962. Connected to the main building by brick walls is the contributing 1935–1937 band building with additions. The property also has an original stone retaining wall. Lenoir High School closed its doors in 1977, when it merged with Gamewell-Collettsville High School and moved across town to form West Caldwell High School. The Lenoir High School building was then Willow St Middle School until 1981. The property was vacant for eight years before becoming a senior housing facility in 1989.The school was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1990.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Lenoir High School (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Lenoir High School
Willow Street Southwest, Lenoir

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Wikipedia: Lenoir High SchoolContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 35.911388888889 ° E -81.543611111111 °
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Address

LHS Apartments

Willow Street Southwest 102
28645 Lenoir
North Carolina, United States
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LenoirHighSchool
LenoirHighSchool
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Edgar Allan Poe House (Lenoir, North Carolina)
Edgar Allan Poe House (Lenoir, North Carolina)

The Edgar Allan Poe House is a historic home located in Caldwell County at 506 Main Street NW in Lenoir, North Carolina. The two-story Dutch Colonial Revival style house with wraparound porch and gambrel roof was built in 1905 by Edgar Allan Poe, who was not the famous Boston poet born 1809. After finishing law school, Poe moved to Asheville in 1890 and worked as a carpenter with local architecture firm Alfonse, building structures in Hickory. Additionally Poe contributed to the beginning construction of Vanderbilt's Biltmore Estate in Asheville. The business district in the town of Lenoir was founded in 1841. Growth was slow until the arrival of Chester & Lenoir Railroad in 1884, which boosted trade and industrial development. During this local industrial boom, Poe moved from his native home of Dallas, North Carolina, to Lenoir in 1893. Poe constructed several commercial buildings in Lenoir including the Courtney Building (1907) and the Lenoir Furniture and Hardware Building (1908). The largest contract attributed to Poe was the construction of the Caldwell County Courthouse (1903). In 1897 on October 28 Edgar Allan Poe married Eugenia Maude Miller, daughter of a pioneering family who moved to Caldwell County in the early 1890s. The Miller family owned property on North Main Street and built a house where Eugenia Maude lived until marriage. Poe built his first house in the neighborhood of his in-laws, on Scroggs Street. Poe's two children, Eugene Allan (1898-1964) and Carolyn Ransom (1903-1979), were born in the house on Scroggs Street. In 1905, the Poe family bought a half acre on North Main Street and began constructing their second home. This second house on North Main Street remained in ownership of the Poe family until August 1999. Poe was an active member of the community as an architect, a prolific builder, a lawyer, and the mayor of Lenoir for four years.The home was restored by Joel Kincaid and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in March 2001.