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The front facade faces north on Aragon Street. The Charleston style row house is built on a narrow lot with porches on one side.
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The east view of the home shows the ornate side porches as well as the back apartment which is a separate dwelling.
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Two guests sign in for the home tour.
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The traffic circle forms a centerpiece for the streetscape. It can be seen from 9th Avenue, Romana Street and Cevallos Street.
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Romana Street at Jordan Financial Services is the scene for the first shoot of the day. The actors struggle to move a heavy sofa on the front porch of the cottage.
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The crew and ad agency representatives watch the actors during one of the first takes of the day.
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The church is the headquarters of the Bagdad Village Preservation Association.
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Bagdad is a small town about 20 miles east of Pensacola. It was a major center for the lumber industry at the turn-of-the-century.
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The home is located on about ten acres surrounded by a white picket fence.
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The bright green foilage of the live oak is typical during early spring.
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Many of the trees in Bagdad are draped with Spanish moss.
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A canopy of live oaks covers most of the block.
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A picket fence frames the eastern property border.
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The home and surrounding acreage borders on Pond Creek to the north.
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The Methodist Church in Bagdad as seen from the vantage point of Forsyth Street. The viewer is facing south.
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Viewer is facing north on Forsyth St. The church is located on the right of the picture.
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The viewer faces northeast from the vantage point of Forsyth Street in Bagdad, FL.
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The front facade of the church faces Forsyth Street in the downtown historic district. The church was built in 1885.
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The front facade of the church faces Forsyth Street in the downtown historic district. The church was built in 1885.
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A view of the altar facing the south wall of the church.
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A reverse of the above picture shows Charlie Kilpatrick, a church officer.
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The viewer faces the rear of church.
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The homes along Belleville Avenue reflect the wealth amassed in the timber boom at the end of the 19th century.
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This side view of the house shows another interesting turret on the back.
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The distinguishing feature of a Neoclassical house is a portico of white classical columns, Ionic, Corinthian or Doric columns, dormer windows, and side porches are elements common to the style of the 1900's to 1940's.
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This house is built in the classical revival style.
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The massive front pediment is flanked by clusters of columns.
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This home is another example of classical revival style. The curved central portico gives the house a soaring grace.
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The blooming azalea's form a lace trim in the garden.
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The gazebo is in the center of the space.
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The house is located in the historic district.
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Century is a small town that flourished at the end of the 19th century. The major industry was the lumber business. The historic district features Victorian homes.
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The shotgun house is a typical style and served as home for many lumber mill workers.
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The Victorian mansion was built in 1904.
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The home is constructed entirely of heart pine wood.
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Columns that are as wide as many of the surrounding trees flank the front door with its heavy beveled glass insets that have rippled under the weight of years. The spacious interior contains 18 rooms.
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There are 6 bedrooms, 4 baths, 12 fireplaces, office, parlor, study, living, dining, kitchen, utility room, and third-floor ballroom in the 7500 square foot house.
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The mansion was built by one of the owners of the Alger Sullivan lumber mill.
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The sheltered portico is attached to the west side of the house.
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At the beginning of the 20th century, Century, Florida was the nation's leading producer of Southern pine timber.
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Pecan orchards flank the house in three directions.
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A long entrance road leads up a hill to the three-story mansion.
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A row of crape myrtle trees line the driveway.
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The property is located on Highway 4A.
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The carriage house is located directly behind the main house.
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The stable and pump house are located adjacent to the carriage house in the rear of the property.
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The back of the main house can be seen in the left side of the photograph.
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The water was pumped from an artisan spring to the house.
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There are many old hardwood trees on the property, such as the oak pictured above.
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The lake is approximately eight acres.
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The lake is decked on the east side with concrete.
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A man-made waterfall functions as the spillway for the lake.
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The rocks that form the waterfalls were brought from the old lumber mill.
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Tannenheim is German for fir tree house.
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The lake is surrounded by mature oaks and native hardwoods.
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The design of the cottage is similar to a Victorian 4-Square Georgian.
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The Victorian cottage is situated on 1/4 acre.
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The crew observes the action on the front porch of the cottage.
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The shop facade faces south on the corner of Gadsden Street and Ninth Avenue. This is one of a row of large Victorian structures which are utilized as shops and offices. Diagonal parking is located in front of the building.
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A magnificent canopy of oak trees shelters the shop.
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The building was formerly used as the Coast Guard Station.
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The home is a modest four-square Georgian cottage built in the Victorian period.
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Grandma Peaden's cottage is a classic Victorian home.
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The cottage features hardwood floors and a full bath.
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The cottage features period pieces such as the antique bed shown above.
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There is a fireplace in the living area.
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This Victorian home has classical elements such as the pediment facade.
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The house has extensive and elaborate scrollwork.
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A combination of elements, such as the small pediment forms over the windows and front door echo the large pediment over the front porch.
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The house sits on several acres of land.
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Gingerbread and classical elements combine to make the steamboat house an interesting folk Victorian home.
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The home is located on a one acre lot on the corner of Pine and Pike Street. It was built in 1870 by Republican sherrif John Butler. Elements of the house were added in the early 20th century.
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The two-story structure is 3,600 square feet with 4 bedrooms and 4 bathrooms, a formal parlor and living room with an additonal family room.
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This house has the distinction of having the first indoor tub installed in Milton, Florida. That claw-footed model is still in use.
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The porch wraps around two sides on the first floor. It is finished with a stucco facing. The double rooms and the porch in this east view were added between 1910 and 1920.
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The house is an example of gothic revival architecture which its central tower, unique silhouette and decorative elements.
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This unusual Victorian home was said to have been shipped upriver in several pieces.
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The home is located on the corner of Pine and Escambia Street.
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The luxuriant palm trees are not native to the area.
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Azalea bushes and dogwood trees are a compliment to the large yard surrounding the home.
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The house is located on the northwest corner of Pine and Pike Street.
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The little church sits on the corner of Oak and Escambia Streets.
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The house is located on the corner of Reus and DeSoto Street across from Alabama Square in the North Hill Preservation District.
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The park can be seen on the left of the photograph.
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The home faces Alabama Square on the southeast corner.
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The front porch is flanked by guardian lions.
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The photo was taken at 10:16 a.m. on September 16th as the winds of Hurricane Ivan were subsiding. There is no damage to the cottage except for a shutter with a defective hinge which can be seen on the far right of the photo.
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The Victorian house is in the process of being converted from an office into a residence. The design of the gingerbread coumn brackets is art nouveau, a style of decoration developed in France at the end of the 19th century characterized by flowing lines and curving organic shapes.
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The structure has a large central hall. Four living spaces or parlors open onto the hall.
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The west front parlor has a fireplace on the interior wall.
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Another living room/parlor can be seen through the arch in the west front parlor.
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The arch separates the living areas on the west side of the house.
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The detail shows the pocket door hidden in the archway.
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Full length window open onto the front porch. The facade of the house faces south.
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The bay window is on the west wall of the house in the front parlor. The pocket door pictured above is on the right of this frame.
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The view of the palm tree can be seen through the central panel of the bay window in the front west parlor.
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Floor length windows open onto the front porch in the west front parlor.
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There is a front porch set back on the east side of the facade. This is a view from the central hall.
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The east parlor has several floor length windows which open onto the front porch.
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The door to the east front parlor opens off the front hall.
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This living room/parlor adjoins the east front parlor.
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The kitchen area is at the rear of the first floor.
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There is a back porch alongside of the kitchen.
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This is a view of the rear of the staircase.
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The staircase is situated in the rear of the central hall.
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There is a second floor porch.
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This is the front room on the east side of the second floor.
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The Queen Anne house has approximately 5000 square feet of living area on three floors. It is located on the northeast corner of Gonzales and Baylen Streets. The property was much larger when the house was built, but an owner during the 1920's sold the backyard to his son because of his desire to have him live close by.
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A Florida room was added to the home in 1940 to allow more room for one the quadroplex apartments upstairs. It breaks the Victorian lines of the home but there are no plans to remove the addition.
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The stone on the exterior of the house were ballast stones thrown ashore by 19th century sailing vessels that were in Pensacola to take on lumber. Stones are commonly used in large North Hill homes.
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A balcony railing was situated as porch roof trim. Plans are underway to restore this important architectural element.
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The beveled glass at the entrance and over some of the large bay windows in the house are all original. The front door was originally beveled glass but it was destroyed during an "Animal House" party when aviators rented the house in the 1990s.
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Half of the gingerbread under the arch in the hallway was missing when the Odom's purchased the house in 1998; however, in a small recess in the stairwell closet all the missing pieces except ofr fome small fragment were discovered. The owners meticulously re-assembled everything, glueing the pieces and holding them in place with bread ties until the glue had dried.
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Beautiful original fireplace mantles dominate six rooms in the house. One fireplace has been converted to gas. Five are coal burning.
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The stained glass window is original to the house. The window shown is in the front stairwell. A second, duplicate window is below in the stairwell closet ont he first floor.
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The claw foot tub in this downstairs bathroom is original to the house. It is the one where Wallis Warfield Spencer, (later Simpson) was tied to on three occasions by her drunken husband, LT Spencer.
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The tub was refinished with new porcelin. The feet are elaborately carved brass.
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A canopy of live oaks shades two Victorian homes on Barcelona Street.
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The home is situated on one acre with several auxillary buildings.
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Queen Anne houses are spectacularly crafted.
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This is the corner of LaRua and Barcelona Street.
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A reverse view of the intersection of LaRua and Barcelona Street shows the relationship of the largest Victorian homes in the neighborhood.
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The home is located on the corner of North Barcelona and Gadsden Street.
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The North Hill neighborhood has a canopy of hardwood trees like this magnolia.
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The central focus of the park is the circular seating area near the gazebo.
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The Springhill Guest House is located at 903 North Spring Street.
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Queen Anne house are characterized by towers or turrets.
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The ceiling in the attic turret is finished in heart pine wood.
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The Turner Shop is located on Baylen Street in the North Hill Preservation District, adjacent to downtown Pensacola.
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The shop is located on the west side of Baylen Street.
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The Victorian home dates from the 1870's and is a significant contributing structure with lavish detailing. The lots in North Hill are large compared to those in the Seville Historic District.
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The home is an interior design shop.
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The Victorian house sits adjacent to large commercial locations.
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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 house faces the park in this view to the south.
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The side of the cottage faces Zaragoza Street. The house is a rare example of "to the sidewalk" buildings of Spanish origin found from New Orleans to Pensacola.
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The cottage was moved to the village site as a demonstration of a typical dwelling of the period.
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The back of the cottage faces the LaValle House.
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This is a north view of the cottage.
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This is the south side of the terminal building. The facade faces Main Street.
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The Lear House was built in 1888. It is located on the north side of Zaragoza Street in the Pensacola Historic Village which is a complex of museums and historic houses in downtown Pensacola. For further information refer to the website at www.historic penscola.org The program is administrated by the State of Florida.
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The Lear House is a museum in the Historic Village. The interior is furnished in the style of the 1920's.
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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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A view from the west side of the first floor front porch. Zaragoza Street can be seen on the right and the interior yard of the home is on the left. The Lavalle Cottage Museum is in the far left corner of the site. There is a common kitchen garden and courtyard between the buildings.
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From the front porch facing south, the Weaver's Cottage can be seen to the right. The entrance of the parking lot that services the complex is left of the Weaver's Cottage. Twenty-five vehicles can be parking alongside and behind the cottage.
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West side view of the Lear House. The Lavalle Cottage is on the left of the frame. The Zaragoza Street trolley can be seen on the far right
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A west view of the Lear House. Church Street is located to the north. The historic property encompasses the entire block. In the foreground one of the kitchen gardens and an outside oven can be seen. The Lavalle House is located on the right edge of the photograph.
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The gardens around the house are tended by the Escambia County Master Gardeners. A bed of caladiums wrap around the west side of the house.
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Colonial re-enactors give tours of the house during the yearly open house at the village.
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Old fashioned hydrangias add a nostalgic note to the gardening layout on the east sie of the home.
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The old Episcopal Parish schoolhouse on Church Street can be seen from the northwest corner of the house.
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The picket fence along Zaragoza Street provides a place for blooming vines. The east side of the Lear House is in the background.
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The Marker was placed by Don Tristan de Luna Chapter of the National Society, Daughters of the American Colonists, and Historic Pensacola Preservation Board, 1992. The text of the marker reads as follows: The Lear-Rocheblave House was built on the site of the British Government House of the 1770’s. Built by John and Kate Lear, the house was purchased in 1897 by Benito Rocheblave, a local tug boat captain. The Rocheblave family has long been part of West Florida’s historical tradition, having settled in Colonial Spanish Florida around 1817.
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A picket fence marks the boundary between the Lear-Rocheblave House and the Julee Cottage. The picket fence in the foreground surrounds the old well.
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The museum is located on the corner of Zaragoza and Tarragona Streets. The sign on the right designates the official entrance to Historic Pensacola Village. The village is located in the heart of one of the oldest historic districts in the Southeast: the Seville Historic District in Pensacola. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the Sevilel Historic District is located on Pensacola Bay.
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The plaque is located on the front of the church on the right side of the door.
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The plaque is located on the front of the church on the right side of the door.
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The church does not have a clear style since it has evolved over time. It has been described as Gothic. In 1832, the church was built for $4,500.00. In the late 1990’s the Historic Pnesacola Preservation Board spend $800,000.00 to rehabilitate the church.
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Originally the building was slicked with a white-colored lime wash to support the weak bake-fired bricks with which it was constructed.
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For a brief while during the Civil War, the entire congregation of Old Christ Church along with all but about 80 of Pensacola’s population, fled to Alabama. During their absence, Union troops occupied the church and used it as a hospital and barracks.
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This is a north view from the vantage point of Church Street.
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Today the building is at the center of Historic Pensacola Village to be used for concerts, recitals, lectures, adn weddings as well as a community town hall.
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The south side of the church is on Zaragoza Street.
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The Christ Church Episcopal parishioners moved into a new church on north Palafox in 1903. The Episcopal Bishop of Florida deconsecrated the building 1935. The building served as the first public library until 1959. Between 1959 and 1995, Pensacola Historical Museum based itself in the bulding, but by 1995 the church had again fallen into disrepair. In 1995, the city voted to return the deed to Old Christ Church vestry who in turn leased it to Historic Pensacola to make it eligible for state grants to fund the necessary repairs.
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Old Christ Church is situated on the corner of Adams and Zaragoza Street across from Seville Square, as can be seen in the photograph.
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The Dorr House can be seen across the front lawn.
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The cottage is located on the southside of Zaragoza Street. The Wisteria Cafe is the current lease holder. The property is part of the Historic Pensacola Village.
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All of the buildings on this block of Zaragoza Street are part of the West Florida Preservation Board's historic village.
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The Wisteria Cafe is the current leaseholder of the cottage.
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The viewer is facing the front doors of the cottage on the porch. A reflection of the Lear House can be seen in the window of the door on the left.
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The viewer faces west from the vantage point of the porch. The Julee cottage is center frame and the side garden of the Lear House is on the right.
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The cottage dates from 1880. It is used as a Historic Village museum displaying tools and implements of the weaver's trade.
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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 streetscape shows the Weaver's Cottage Museum flanked to the right by the side of the Tivoli High House and to the left by the Seville Mechantile Store. The buildings are located on the south side of Zaragoza Street and are directly across from the Lear House.
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The streetscape shows the Weaver's Cottage Museum flanked to the right by the side of the Tivoli High House and to the left by the Seville Mechantile Store. The buildings are located on the south side of Zaragoza Street and are directly across from the Lear House.
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The streetscape shows the Weaver's Cottage Museum flanked to the right by the side of the Tivoli High House and to the left by the Seville Mechantile Store. The buildings are located on the south side of Zaragoza Street and are directly across from the Lear House.
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The facade of the house faces Zaragoza Street. The original Tivoli High House was demolished in 1937. It was reconstructed in 1976 from photographs and archaelogical evidence. The first floor of the Tivoli House serves as the Historic Pensacola Village gift shop and ticket office.
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The second floor porch of the Tivoli House forms an arcade over the sidewalk on Zaragoza Street.
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The rear of the Tivoli House faces a courtyard and arbor.
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A walkway between the Tivoli House on the left and the Weavers Cottage on the right leads to Zaragoza Street.
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An apron porch with an overhang helps keep the house cool during the hot Gulf Coast summers.
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The house is a good example of a French Creole Cottage. It is rectanglular design with a central hallway and high ceilings.
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Penko Restaurant Supply Company is located on Palafox Street.
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This view of the building shows the arcade formed by the wrought-iron balcony.
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Ceilings of the front porch were traditionally painted blue.
In the South Carolina Low Country, there's a name for the blue of porch ceiling: haint blue. Alphonso Brown, a guide with Gullah Tours in Charleston, S.C., explains that a haint is a spirit or a ghost, and in Charleston, many people also paint the trim on their houses blue to ward off evil spirits.
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New buyers couldn't afford Victorian, Edwardian, or Queen Anne homes that were popular at that time. To make purchasing more affordable, something simpler was needed. They looked for a structure that could be erected easily, quickly and inexpensively. The shotgun house filled the bill.
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As the shotgun house evolved through the 19th century, it was embellished with decorative elements borrowed from popular tastes of the time, from Greek revival to Victorian gingerbread.
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The building complex consists of four dwelling units. The two front units are designed for combination office and residential use.
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The cottage is located on the east side of Florida Blanca Street.
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The Fredrickson home is decked out for Christmas with traditional fir garland and trim.
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Ron Fredrickson prepares for the "pole" party to celebrate the advent of underground utilities on Cevallos Street.
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The ceremonial pole is festooned with ribbons for the occasion.
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Janice Hitt, President of the Pensacola Historic District Property Owners, cuts the ceremonial ribbon symbolizing the transfer of electrical power.
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The power pole is ready to load onto the truck. The pole will be used in another location by Gulf Power.
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The home is an example of the 'late Cracker' four-square Georgian with classic principles of symmetry, formality and elegance. The building tradition was passed down from the earliest single-pen examples built in the country. The four-square is the town house version of the style.
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The term four-square refers to a floor plan with a broad central hallway with two rooms to either side. The rooms were large and square in proportion. Two back-to back fireplaces and a common chimney separated each pair of rooms. Porches were part of the social tradition in the days before air conditioning like an outside parlor. Along the streetscape, porches are aligned like one long room.
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The Victorian cottage is located across the street from Seville Square.
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The ceiling of the porch is painted sky blue to "scare" away the haunts or ghosts. The color of the house, shutters and ceiling are traditional and the most popular colors used during the 19th century.
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The Victorian cottage is shotgun style which is one room wide with a hall through the length of the house.
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The building was renovated in 1996 and is now used as a residence.
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The buildings was constructed in 1895 by the St. Michael Creole Benevolent Association.
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The elaborate color scheme is unusual in the historic district where most of the homes were painted white with green trim and gray.
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The Sims have lived in this home since 1945.
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Gail and George Sullivan were presented with a first place award in the Pensacola Historic District Property Owners annual Christmas decorating contest.
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The Chandler home is lavishly deck-out for Christmas 2001.
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The cottage is located on Zaragoza Street. It is an exceptional renovation of a home that was originally built in 1895.
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In this dramatic "before" picture, the state of the historic district before the preservation movement began is clearly demonstrated. This is a facade view which shows another house attached to the front right side. A small portion of the front porch can be seen to the left.
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This Victorian home which dates from 1870's is unique in lavish decorative elements.
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The home is located on Zaragoza Street. It faces north. The streetscape shows a variety of Victorian cottages dating from the 1870's.
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This eastern view of the home shows the brick sidewalks in the Historic District. The infrastructure includes underground utilities and decorative lanterns.
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The porch of the home and the neighboring houses reflect a series of outdoor living rooms which function as a public space. This view shows the northeast corner of Florida Blanca and Zaragoza Street.
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In this view to the west of the Trawick building, the neighboring structure across the street is located to the north. Jamie's Restaurant has a large parking lot on the west side.
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A complete view of the neighborhood is seen from the front porch from Florida Blanca Street on the right to Cleland Antique Shop on the far left.
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There is an auxillary building in the back yard which is used as a guest house. The origins of the guest cottage are unknown. It is assumed that the structure was added at the same time as the rear addition and is probably another house which was moved to the site.
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From the vantage point of the back yard, the second floor widows walk can be seen in the upper right corner of the photograph. The back roof of the addition retains the classic pyramidal shape of the four-square Georgian style.
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The master bath opens onto the back porch.
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Wicker furniture compliments the back porch.
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This is the view looking down from the upstairs balcony at the backyard.
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The door with stained glass was installed by Thorpe, the homeowner in the 1970's. The etched glass central figure is encased by a stained glass frame.
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The arrangement of the foyer and hall are not traditional to the four-square architectural style. Most of the hall was eliminated and a staircase added for access to the upperstairs bedroom. Behind the staircase there was room to add a large closet and bath.
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The Renaissance Revival painting was done by Larry Grossman. The antique buffet was a gift from Nancy Trawick grandmother.
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On the wall and throughout the house there are dozens of mirrors which acts to reflect light.
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The painted table was commissioned by Nancy.
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The table was painted by Larry Grossman and acquired by Nancy directly from the artist.
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Walls are heart-pine throughout the house. Nancy stripped the walls by sanding them down to the bare wood over a three month period.
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A view from the kitchen through to the family room shows the new additon onto the original house. The date of the addition is unknown.
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A collection of botanical prints hang on the wall in front of the air exchange unit. The original fireplace is on the other wall. Only the brick stack remains of the original structure.
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The wash room is the utility room. The tile floor was added by Nancy.
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The antique bar was installed by Nancy.
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Nancy installed a light behind the etched glass in the cabinet.
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A classical frieze accents the doorway between the kitchen and family room.
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The elaborate stained glass doors lead out onto the back porch.
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The primitive pine table in the family room is from Nancy's family
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This bath is located at the rear of the original central hall of the Four-Square Georgian house plan. A small pass-through hall connects the large living area to the master bedroom.
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The bedroom was painted and decorated to reflect the history of the house as a bordello. The original walls were painted in multicolors of orange, lime green and yellow. Nancy repainted with a "red" bordello theme.
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The fireplaces were exposed when the dry wall was removed. Nancy discovered this double-flue fireplace when she was knocking out walls to create a door between rooms. This would have been two rooms with a separate fireplace serving each. There are gas logs installed in the house fireplaces.
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The armoire functions as a closet. Homes of this period had no closets. Nancy has added hanging space in a closet behind the central staircase.
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The bay window of leaded glass with stained panes is very unusual. It imparts a light airy feeling to the room.
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The 1920's armoire functions as a bathroom cabinet.
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Toilets moved into the house when interior bathrooms became available in the 1920's and 1930's. The main sewer system in Pensacola was installed by Federal Government workers during the Depression. The first line was dug in the middle of Garden Street.
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The small gaming table is lacquered and decorated in a Chinese motif.
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The home is located on the corner of Zaragoza and Florida Blanca Street.
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The door glass was etched with a fleur de lis motif to show the French heritage of Lucy Reser. The drawing on the right wall is entitled "Donkey" and was done by a friend of Lucy's who is an artist exhibiting in NYC and Washington, D.C.
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The house has no downstairs closets except for under the stairwell access in the dining room. Cabinets, amoires and dressers provide the necessary storage space.
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In the shotgun house plan the dining room is the second room on the first floor.
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The bedrooms are located on the second floor.
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The photograph is part of the original survey of the historic district by Historic Pensacola.
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The Victorian home is decorated for Christmas with thousands of twinkling lights placed in the trees and shrubbery.
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The view of the downstairs porch shows the rich detail of the Victorian molding.
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The view of the living room from the vantage point of the front door reveals the open floor plan of the house.
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The free standing double-flue fireplace is similar to the ones at the Trawick house where walls were removed to reveal the chimney in the center of two rooms.
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The floors were imported from a building in Mobile. After Hurricane Georges, parts of the flooring was replaced with planks from the Buggyworks Building on Intendencia that was demolished.
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An original 1901 hand-crank wall phone still functions and is used as the kitchen phone.
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A border of casual leaves and flowers accents the kitchen molding by artist Reese Foret.
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There is a table set up by the front door to facilitate check-in at the tour of homes.
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The law office is located on Government Street across from Seville Square.
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The Camp Street Dental Lab was built in 1997.
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This is the home of proprietor, Connie Newton.
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The cottage was built in 1860.
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A view from the porch shows the southeast corner of Government and Alcaniz Street. The porches of the Connie Cottage and the Lind house are approximately 20 feet apart.
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The home is decorated for Halloween.
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Connie Newton enjoys a quiet moment on the front porch.
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The popular restaurant is owned by Chips Kirschenfeld.
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The houses share a common porch line which is indicative of a 19th century village.
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This is the only example of a steamboat facade in the historic district.
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The law firm is lavishly decorated and trimmed with garland for Christmas 2001.
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The building was moved to the historic district in the 1970's.
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The building is located at the corner of Government and Alcaniz Streets.
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This view shows the side of the building adjacent to Alcaniz Street.
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This is a view of the building from the Port. It faces Bayfront Parkway.
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The cottage is located on Intendencia Street. The construction period is estimated from 1830 - 1862.
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The home is a four-square Georgian architectural style. It is located on the north side of East Intendencia Street.
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The old photograph is part of the survey that was used to establish the Pensacola Historic District in the late 1960's.
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The Minshew firm was presented with a first place in the Pensacola Historic District Property Owners decorating contest.
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The company is located in the Flynn House on Intendencia Street.
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An east view of the facade of the church building shows the elaborate trim work.
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This side view of the porch shows the fine detail of this Creole cottage.
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The facade of these Victorian buildings shows the unique alignment of the front porches and the arrangement of the buildings almost immediately adjacent to the sidewalk.
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The shotgun style cottage is located on Government Street. The builder of the home was Sevireno Barrios in 1860
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The cottage now serves as a law office for Ron Nelson.
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These warehouses are located on Jefferson and Main Street in the historic district of downtown Pensacola.
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Evon Marsh, proprietor is standing on the front porch of her establishment.
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Customers can enjoy the ambiance of a sidewalk cafe across the street from Seville Square.
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The building has a typical floor plan with four front rooms and a central hall with a pyramidal roof.
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The Gothic house is located on Perdido Key Drive. Its distinctive style has made it the focus of interest as a location for commercials and movies.
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The home is surrounded by dunes. Sea oats, lichens and cacti are ground cover.
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The facade of the house faces the Gulf of Mexico.
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The home is isolated in the center of acres of native plants on low dune formations.
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This is a southern view of the gothic beach house from the vantage point of Perdido Key Drive.
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The home is located approximately 200 feet from Perdido Key Drive.
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