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Deffenbacher-Weagle House
Eva Laura Deffenbacher, another child of “Grandpa&rdquo...
Drury House
This house was built by George Drury, Coburg’s first ma...
Bartholomew House
This is a one-story classic box house with intact exterior an...
Carl and Jess Hopkins House
Built in 1890, this Gothic Revival home was thought to be the...
Clair Vaughn House
This Vernacular Gothic / Victorian Eclectic home, built in 18...
Raleigh and Grace Manley
Built in 1920, this Bungalow was moved to this site from the ...
N.C. and Rebecca Burns House / Lovelace House
This home was built for N.C. and Rebecca Burns in 1894. It ch...
J.C. Goodale-E.M Jarnigan House
This house was built (c. 1885) for J.C. Goodale’s famil...
IOOF Hall – Coburg
The original Independent Order of Odd Fellows Hall was built ...
Grange Hall-Coburg
Organized March 11, 1915, the first Grange building was built...
Results for R
Deffenbacher-Weagle House
Eva Laura Deffenbacher, another child of “Grandpa” Fred Deffenbacher, married Fred Weagle and lived in this home. Also built in 1910, this house is a Foursquare 19th/20th American Movements / Classic Box.
Drury House
This house was built by George Drury, Coburg’s first mayor in 1906. This house had major remodeling in 1958. Moved in 2015 to current location at 32703 E Locust.
Bartholomew House
This is a one-story classic box house with intact exterior and interior, a period landscaped yard and wood floored garage. Three other classic boxes existed on this site until approximately 1905-1915: two on the east edge facing Harrison Street, one ...
Carl and Jess Hopkins House
Built in 1890, this Gothic Revival home was thought to be the home of Carl Hopkins and his brother Jess. Carl was the City Recorder in the early 1900s; Jess was a rancher on land south of Premier RV camping ...
Clair Vaughn House
This Vernacular Gothic / Victorian Eclectic home, built in 1890, was home to Clair Vaughn, the Beesons and then Mr. Veach before being bought by Joe Crownover in 1942. Originally a 3-room gabled rectangle, there have been extensive remodeling and ...
Raleigh and Grace Manley
Built in 1920, this Bungalow was moved to this site from the Bottom Loop area in the 1940s by Raleigh Manley. Beginning in 1958 Raleigh Manley was mayor for 20 consecutive years, a feat that has never been equaled.
N.C. and Rebecca Burns House / Lovelace House
This home was built for N.C. and Rebecca Burns in 1894. It changed hands and was owned by several others including Frank Lovelace. Lovelace was a railroad man from Missouri and moved in to this house with his wife and ...
J.C. Goodale-E.M Jarnigan House
This house was built (c. 1885) for J.C. Goodale’s family, with select lumber from the mill he operated in Coburg which he eventually sold to Booth-Kelly in 1899. On March 1, 1903, Doctor Milton Emerson Jarnigan from Tennessee moved into ...
IOOF Hall – Coburg
The original Independent Order of Odd Fellows Hall was built 1886, and housed the Grange, Free Masons, IOOF, the Rebecca, and Good Templars, which held their meetings upstairs, and the ground floor was used for all church services. When the ...
Grange Hall-Coburg
Organized March 11, 1915, the first Grange building was built in 1939 after the original IOOF Hall, which housed the Grange, burned down in 1937. This was the site of the original IOOF Hall. The IOOF and the Rebecca held ...