Emory Place Historic District

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Emory_Place_Historic_District an entity of type: Thing

The Emory Place Historic District is a historic district in Knoxville, Tennessee, United States, located just north of the city's downtown area. The district consists of several commercial, residential, religious, and public buildings that developed around a late nineteenth century train and trolley station. The district includes the Knoxville High School building, St. John's Lutheran Church, First Christian Church, and some of the few surviving rowhouses in Knoxville. The district was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1994. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Emory Place Historic District
rdf:langString Emory Place Historic District
rdf:langString Emory Place Historic District
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xsd:date 1994-11-10
rdf:langString Charles I. Barber, Albert Baumann, Sr., Dean Parmalee, R. F. Graf, etc.
rdf:langString Romanesque Revival, Neoclassical Revival
rdf:langString approximately
xsd:integer 1880
xsd:integer 6
rdf:langString Knoxville, Tennessee
rdf:langString Roughly bounded by Broadway, N. Central, Emory, Fifth, East Fourth, and King
rdf:langString Tennessee#USA
rdf:langString yes
rdf:langString hd
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rdf:langString The Emory Place Historic District is a historic district in Knoxville, Tennessee, United States, located just north of the city's downtown area. The district consists of several commercial, residential, religious, and public buildings that developed around a late nineteenth century train and trolley station. The district includes the Knoxville High School building, St. John's Lutheran Church, First Christian Church, and some of the few surviving rowhouses in Knoxville. The district was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1994. Following railroad construction in the 1850s, Knoxville slowly expanded northward. In 1890, the "Dummy Line," a railroad line connecting Knoxville and Fountain City, was established, with what is now Emory Place as its southern terminus. A farmers' market and several small industrial and commercial firms developed adjacent to the train station to take advantage of the influx of customers and transportation advantages. While Emory Place declined with the dismantling of Knoxville's trolley system in the late 1940s, many of its late-nineteenth and early-twentieth century buildings still stand, and have been restored.
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xsd:gYear 1880 1930
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