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In this view, the Dorr house can be seen across the picket fence of Old Christ Church.
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The historic marker can be seen from the sidewalk on Zaragoza Street. The cottage can be seen on the left. In 1804, Francis Heindenberg received from the Spanish governor a lot in the city of Pensacola. Four years later he sold the property to a free black woman named Julee. The sale included a “low wooden house which I have built at my own expense”. Both house and lot sold for three hundred dollars. The house was probably built between 1804 and 1808.
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The roof is "salt box" style. The building was constructed with pegged framing.
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The Julee Cottage is on the north side of Zaragoza Street. The Weavers Cottage can be seen on the right. The cottage rests on brick piers, a typical building feature of early Gulf Coast homes. This slight elevation to the building helps provide air circulation.
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The house is a museum classroom dedicated to Julee Panton.
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The Escambia County Master Gardeners maintain a 19th century kitchen garden anlongside of the house.
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The kitchen garden between the LaValle House and the Julee Cottage has a variety of herbs and aromatic plants intersperced with flowering annuals.
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The Lear House is a central element to the development of Historic Pensacola Village. Since 1988, a series of grant projects have prepared the structure for its role as a museum house. The house museum theme completes a historical timeline in the Historic Pensacola Village that is launched from the exhibits of the Colonial Archaeological Trail. The time period represented at the Lear House provides a contrast to the Victorian theme displayed at the nearby Dorr House.
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The cottage is a Gulf Coast architectural style with two front doors. The house was divided into two one-room apartments. The pyramid roof was once a common sight in Pensacola. The style is wind-resistant during hurricanes and tropical storms.
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This view of the cottage is taken from the side yard of the Lear-Rocheblave House across the street.
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The house is situated on the south side of Zaragoza Street between the Moreno and Weaver Cottages.
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The photograph is part of the original survey of the historic district by Historic Pensacola.
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The cottage is located on the corner of Ninth Avenue and Government Street.
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This is the home of proprietor, Connie Newton.