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615 Dupree Street – Ezra L. Wilson House

This one-story, side-gabled house is three bays wide and triple-pile with a small gabled projection on the east elevation. County tax records date the property to 1932; the earliest known occupant is Ezra L. Wilson in 1935.
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614 Dupree Street – Charles C. Spaulding, Jr. House

This two-story, side-gabled Colonial Revival house is three bays wide and double-pile with a one-story porch over a single car garage on the east elevation. County tax records date the property to 1940; the earliest known occupant is Charles C. Spaulding, Jr. in 1945. Spaulding, Jr. was the son of C. C. Spaulding who, with John Merrick and Dr. Aaron Moore, led the North Carolina Mutual Insurance Company. Spaulding, Jr. was a vice-president and general council for the North Carolina Mutual Insurance Company.
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613 Dupree Street – Clyde Richardson House

This one-story, front-gabled bungalow is three bays wide and triple-pile with a projecting side-gabled bay on the west elevation, flush with the façade, and a flush gable on the east elevation. The earliest known occupant is Clyde Richardson (barber, Excelsior Barbershop) in 1930.
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610 Dupree Street – George W. Samuels House

This one-story, hip-roofed house is three bays wide and single-pile with a hip-roofed rear ell on the southeast corner and a shed-roofed block west of the ell. A low, stone wall extends across the front of the property. The earliest known occupant is George W. Samuels (laborer) in 1930.
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608 Dupree Street – John S. Bynum House

This one-story, hip-roofed house is two bays wide and triple-pile. The earliest known occupant is John S. Bynum (laborer) in 1930.
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605 Dupree Street – Mrs. Susie R. Christmas House

This one-story, front-gabled Minimal Traditional house is three bays wide and double-pile with a flush gable on the west elevation and a gabled rear ell on the northwest corner. The earliest known occupant is Mrs. Susie R. Christmas (dressmaker) in 1945.
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604 Dupree Street – Mitchiner-Williams House

This one-story, side-gabled bungalow is two bays wide and triple-pile. The earliest known occupants are Lelia Mitchiner and Herbert Williams (tobacco workers) in 1930.
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603 Dupree Street – William Ballentine House

This one-story, hip-roofed brick house is two bays wide and double-pile with an engaged porch that wraps around the front and west sides of the house and a hip-roofed rear ell. The house is listed as vacant in the 1930 city directory; the earliest known occupant is William Ballentine in 1935.
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602 Dupree Street – Samuel Green House

This one-and-a-half-story, side-gabled bungalow is three bays wide and triple-pile with a gabled rear ell on the southwest corner and a shed-roofed block east of the ell. County tax records date the building to 1930; the earliest known occupant is Samuel Green (laborer) in 1930.
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601 Dupree Street – Edward Lloyd House

This one-story, hip-roofed bungalow is four bays wide and double-pile with a hip-roofed rear ell. The earliest known occupant is Edward Lloyd (houseman) in 1930. Early deeds indicate that the house was sold by the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company in 1943, indicating that the Mutual (or one of its real estate subsidiaries) likely erected the house.
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