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Original Administrative Building - North Carolina College

Part of the original campus for the National Religious Training School, the adminstration building was destroyed by fire in January 1925.
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616 Price Avenue – Charles H. Dunnigan House

This one-story, clipped-front-gabled bungalow is three bays wide and triple-pile with a projecting clipped-gabled bay on the left end of the façade and a full-width, gabled rear ell. The earliest known occupant is Charles H. Dunnigan (plasterer) in 1925.
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615 Price Avenue – C. Bruce Noel House

This one-story, hip-roofed bungalow is three bays wide and four pile with projecting, side-gabled bays on the side elevations and a gabled rear ell on the northwest corner. The house appears on the 1937 Sanborn map; the earliest known occupant is C. Bruce Noel (presser, Eakes-Hood Inc.) in 1940.
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614 Price Avenue – Lonnie Smith House

This one-story, front-gabled house is three bays wide and triple-pile. The earliest known occupant is Lonnie Smith (barber) in 1925.
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613 Price Avenue – Isaac Flintall House

This one-story, side-gabled bungalow is three bays wide and triple-pile with a full-width, gabled rear ell. County tax records date the building to 1925. The earliest known occupant is Isaac Flintall (tobacco worker) in 1925; Flintall still owns the house as of 2010.
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612 Price Avenue – Jacob B. Overby House

This one-story, hip-roofed house is three bays wide and triple-pile with a gabled front dormer, a projecting, hip-roofed bay on the east elevation, and a full-width, shed-roofed rear ell. The earliest known occupant is Jacob B. Overby (manager, N C Barber Shop) in 1930.
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611 Price Avenue – Page House

This one-story, front-gabled house is three bays wide and triple-pile with a projecting, gabled bay on the east elevation. Preservation Durham moved the house from its original Brant Street location, approximately three blocks southwest of the district on what is now the campus of N.C. Central University, in 2002. The very high raised foundation and wraparound porch are not consistent with the house height and porch treatments of comparable houses in the district.
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610 Price Avenue – Mary F. Mitchell House

This one-story, hip-roofed house is three bays wide and triple-pile with an engaged front porch. The house was listed as vacant in 1930; the earliest known occupant is Mary F. Mitchell in 1935.
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609 Price Avenue – Benjamin Mcallister House

This one-and-a-half-story, side-gabled bungalow is three bays wide and triple-pile with a full-width rear gable with a shed-roofed rear ell beyond it. The earliest known occupant is Benjamin McAllister (elevator operator, Geer Building) in 1935.
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608 Price Avenue – George W. Whitley House

This one-story, side-gabled house is three bays wide and triple-pile with a full-width gabled rear ell and a projecting, shed-roofed bay on the west elevation. The house is listed as vacant in 1930; the earliest known occupant is George W. Whitley in 1935.
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