Dr. David P. Weir House

at 223 N Edgeworth St, Greensboro , 27401 United States

Dr. David P. Weir House is a historic home located at Greensboro, Guilford County, North Carolina. It was built about 1846, and is a two-story, frame structure with Greek Revival and Italianate style design elements. It has a low hip roof pierced by two interior chimneys and a one-story kitchen wing. The house was expanded in 1961 by created a large meeting space at the front of the house for the Greensboro Woman's Club. The house may have been built from a plan provided by the well-known New York architect Alexander Jackson Davis.It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.

Address and contacts of Dr. David P. Weir House

place map
Dr. David P. Weir House
223 N Edgeworth St
Greensboro , NC 27401
United States
Email
Contact Phone
P: (336) 272-1337
Website
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Summary

Dr. David P. Weir House is Greensboro based place and this enity listed in Community & Government category. Located at 223 N Edgeworth St NC 27401. Contact phone number of Dr. David P. Weir House: (336) 272-1337

Landmark & Historical Place category, Greensboro

Downtown Greensboro Historic District
Greensboro , NC 27406 United States

College Hill Historic District
Morehead Ave Greensboro , NC 27403 United States

Greensboro
Greensboro , NC 27401 United States

The Greensboro Amtrak Station, located in Greensboro, North Carolina, is served by three passenger trains, the Crescent, Carolinian and Piedmont. The street address is 236 East Washington Street, and is located in the heart of downtown Greensboro as part of the Galyon Transportation Center. Previously, the station was located at the main rail yard about two miles to the west of downtown.Greensboro Station was originally built in 1927 as the Greensboro Southern Railway Depot. It was a replacement for an 1899 Southern Railway Depot that still exists today, albeit without the gabled-third story and cupola it had in the past. The 1927 depot was donated to the city in 1978, a year before the Southern Railroad finally gave up passenger service. Though efforts to return service to the old station date as far back as 1993, it wasn't reopened to the public until October 1, 2005.Designed by the New York architectural firm of Alfred T. Fellheimer & Steward Wagner, the 1927 Beaux-Arts facade features Ionic columns, a full entablature, and a three-story arched entry. Inside, the ticketing area features a vast mural displaying the service area of the Southern Railway system in the 1920s.Routes Crescent Carolinian and PiedmontGalleryExternal linksGreensboro Amtrak Station & Former Greensboro Station (USA Rail Guide -- Train Web)Greensboro Railroad Stations (North Carolina Railroad Stations)Greensboro, NC (GRO) (Amtrak's Great American Stations)