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1503 Lincoln Street – D. Fuller Spaulding House

This one-story, front-gabled Minimal Traditional house is five bays wide and triple-pile with a side-gabled wing with a porch on the north elevation and a side-gabled wing extending from the south elevation. The earliest known occupant is D. Fuller Spaulding (clerk, N C Mutual Life Insurance Company) in 1930.
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1502 Lincoln Street – James W. Page House

This one-and-a-half-story, side-gabled Period Cottage is four bays wide and triple-pile with two gabled dormers on the façade, a shed-roofed dormer across the rear, and shed-roofed porches on each gable end. The earliest known occupant is James W. Page in 1950; county tax records date the building to 1948.
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1411 Lincoln Street – Roosevelt Hayes House

This one-story, side-gabled house is three bays wide and double-pile with projecting gabled bays on the right end of the façade and on the south elevation. The earliest known occupant is Roosevelt Hayes (tobacco worker) in 1930.
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1409 Lincoln Street – Estella Bethea House

This one-story, front-gabled bungalow is three bays wide and triple-pile with a small, projecting gabled bay on the north elevation. The earliest known occupant is Estella Bethea in 1940; however, the house was listed as vacant in the 1935 city directory and appears on the 1937 Sanborn map.
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1408 Lincoln Street – Mary Hayes House

This one-story, side-gabled Minimal Traditional house is three bays wide and double-pile with a shed-roofed rear ell on the southeast corner. The earliest known occupant is Mrs. Maggie Ingram, widow of William Ingram, in 1945.
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1407 Lincoln Street – Mrs. Maggie Ingram House

This one-story, side-gabled Minimal Traditional house is three bays wide and double-pile with a shed-roofed rear ell on the southeast corner. The earliest known occupant is Mrs. Maggie Ingram, widow of William Ingram, in 1945.
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1405 Lincoln Street – Robert Colclough House

This one-and-a-half story, front-gabled Minimal Traditional house is two bays wide and four bays deep. The earliest known occupant is Robert Colclough (tobacco worker, Liggett & Myers) in 1950.
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1403 Lincoln Street – Mrs. Margaret H. Holloway House

This one-story, gable-on-hip-roofed Ranch house is three bays wide and four-pile with an exposed basement and one-car garage at the rear. The earliest known occupant is Mrs. Margaret H. Holloway in 1960.
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1309 Lincoln Street – Seventh Day Adventist Church

This front-gabled Colonial Revival church features a one-bay-wide, projecting, front-gabled entrance, with a sanctuary behind it. The building, the second on the site, was erected as the Seventh Day Adventist Church in 1954; it is currently occupied by the Lincoln Community Development Center.
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1307 Lincoln Street – William H. Forester House

This one-story, clipped-front-gabled bungalow is three bays wide and triple-pile with flush, clipped-gabled bays toward the rear of each side elevation. The earliest known occupant is William H. Forester in 1935.
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