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Lee & Helen George House

Catawba County, North Carolina Registered Historic Place stubsHickory, North CarolinaHouses completed in 1951Houses in Catawba County, North CarolinaHouses on the National Register of Historic Places in North Carolina
Modernist architecture in North CarolinaNational Register of Historic Places in Catawba County, North Carolina
Lee and Helen George House Hickory North Carolina
Lee and Helen George House Hickory North Carolina

Lee & Helen George House is a historic home located at Hickory, Catawba County, North Carolina. It was built in 1951, and is a one-story, Redwood weatherboard sheathed Modernist / Usonian-style dwelling. The house consists of a center main block with projecting rooms on each end of the façade, a rear wing, and an attached carport.It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2012.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Lee & Helen George House (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Lee & Helen George House
9th Avenue Northeast, Hickory

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Wikipedia: Lee & Helen George HouseContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 35.744722222222 ° E -81.337222222222 °
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Address

9th Avenue Northeast 60
28601 Hickory
North Carolina, United States
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Lee and Helen George House Hickory North Carolina
Lee and Helen George House Hickory North Carolina
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Nearby Places

Moretz Stadium

Helen and Leonard Moretz Stadium is an 8,500-seat stadium located in Hickory, North Carolina. It serves as home to the Lenoir-Rhyne University Bears of the South Atlantic Conference. Moretz Stadium is the fourth oldest stadium in continuous use in NCAA Division II and one of the oldest in the country, built in 1924. Games played there are said to be played "between the bricks" as the walls separating the seating area from the field are made up of brick, which have been a part of the design of the stadium since it opened in 1924. The Stadium currently serves as the home field for the L-R football and men's and women's lacrosse teams and also houses the university's spring commencement exercises. The Lenoir-Rhyne baseball team also used the facility as its home field until a baseball-specific ground was built across the street. In 1960, it was the site for the NAIA National Semifinal football game, which Lenoir-Rhyne won on its way to its only national championship in school history. Moretz Stadium was also home of a 1962 NAIA National Semifinal game and an NCAA Division II Semifinal game in 2013. The stadium has hosted four NCAA Playoff games in its history, all of which came in either 2012 or 2013. A July 2019 assessment discovered problems with the structural integrity of the home stand, as a result of the findings the university has decided to tear down the stand and replace it with a temporary stand for the 2019 season. The school will build a permanent replacement in 2020.