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"This modest frame building was built in the last quarter of the 19th century (exact date unknown). It served as a doctor's office until the 1930s, then remained vacant for about 20 years. It was then used intermittently for the next 50 years. In the 1980s it was renovated and converted to a residence.
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Historic Status: National Register of Historic Places
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Historic Status: National Register of Historic Places
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Historic Status: National Register of Historic Places
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Historic Status: National Register of Historic Places
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Historic Status: National Register of Historic Places--Walton District
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Historic Status: National Register of Historic Places
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Historic Status: National Register of Historic Places
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Historic Status: National Register of Historic Places
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This is a 2-story Neo-Classical Revival brick building (circa 1906) with corbeled brick trim and a shallow pediment rising from the cornice on the facade, which apppears little altered from the original. The building's fenestration is flat-topped, set singly, some of which is trimmed with smooth-dressed stone lintels with keystones.
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This 2-story Neo-Classical Revival-style buff-colored commercial building (circa 1924) has a symmetrical facade, with an extended section with stylized pilasters. There is some brick corbeled ornamet, and a modest cornice on the facade but not on the side and rear elevations.
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The house and farm were added to the National Register in 1989.
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Located along a rural stretch of Burlington Pike, the Dinsmore Homestead is a living document of the life of a prosperous and cultured Boone County farm family in the 19th century. In 1839 Silas Dinsmoor, a Scottish Presbyterian of New Hampshire, and his nephew, Mississippi planter James Dinsmore, purchased 700 acres of land between the Ohio River and Middle Creek. Here they established a diversified farm with sheep, orchards and basket willows, as well as a small vineyard (later ruined by the blight that ravaged the Ohio Valley wine industry).
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Historic Status: National Register of Historic Places
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Historic Status: National Register of Historic Places
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Historic Status: National Register of Historic Places
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Historic Status: Demolished
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Historic Status: National Register of Historic Places
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Historic Status: National Register of Historic Places
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Historic Status: National Register of Historic Places
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Historic Status: National Register of Historic Places
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This building is one of the county's finest mixed-use commercial buildings, with first-floor storefront and upper-story meeting rooms. It was built on Tanner Street in Petersburg in 1913 using brick salvaged from the warehouses of the now-defunct Boone County Distilling Company.
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Historic Status: Demolished 2009
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Historic Status: National Register of Historic Places
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Historic Status: National Register of Historic Places