Photograph of the front and north side of a light-colored, two-story, modified L-plan house located at 911 N. Sycamore Street in Palestine, Texas. It has a front porch with with square supports that have molded caps and a fenced balcony above. Part of the front yard is visible as well as trees on either side.
Located in Anderson County, the Palestine Public Library provides access to information and various programs for the community's benefit. They received a Rescuing Texas History grant to aid in digitization of select materials, including photos taken during a Historic Resources Study in 1991.
Photograph of the front and north side of a light-colored, two-story, modified L-plan house located at 911 N. Sycamore Street in Palestine, Texas. It has a front porch with with square supports that have molded caps and a fenced balcony above. Part of the front yard is visible as well as trees on either side.
Physical Description
1 photograph : positive, col. ; 35 mm.
Notes
The majority of modified L-plan houses in Palestine are 1- or 1 ½-story buildings; however, this property is one of the few local examples that rise to a full two stories in height. In all likelihood, the original porch was two levels and wrapped around the front (east) and side (south) elevations. The present 1-story porch appears to have been built around 1915 because the square supports with molded caps are slightly suggestive of the Classical Revival style. Despite this major and other relatively insignificant changes, the house still retains much of its integrity and is reflective of the kind of houses that some of Palestine’s more affluent citizens built around the turn of the century. This building historically has been divided up into apartments, housing renters such as G.K. Bill, an employee of the I&GN Railroad, and his wife Anna, who lived here during the mid-1920s. By 1935 May Rogers had purchased the house, and she lived here in one of the apartments through the 1940s. She was also the owner of the Quality Shop, which sold ladies’ wear downtown at 208 W. Oak.
Taken from: Historic Resources Survey of Palestine, Texas: An Inventory for The City of Palestine, Volume V, Color Slides, June 1991
This photograph is part of the following collection of related materials.
Rescuing Texas History, 2006
Rescuing Texas History is a project that aims to digitize at-risk photographs, maps, artwork, and more. Funding was provided by the Summerlee Foundation of Dallas.