Roughly bounded by Hancock Ave., Foundry, Mitchell (original); Roughly bounded by Hancock Ave., Foundry, Mitchell, Broad, and Lumpkin sts. (1984 increase); Roughly bounded by Dougherty St., Thomas St., Hickory St., Broad St. South St. and Pulaski St. (2006 revision) Athens, Georgia
August 10, 1978 (original) May 31, 1984 (1984 increase) August 18, 2006 (2006 revision)
The Downtown Athens Historic District is a historic area in the Downtown Athens neighborhood of Athens, Georgia. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978. Its boundaries were revised twice, in 1984 and 2006, and additional documentation was filed in 2006.[1]
Franklin House (c. 1845), 464-474 E. Broad Street, Greek Revival
Whitmire Furniture Company, 382 E. Broad, (1896)
Athens Refrigeration and Appliance Company (1889), 312 E. Broad Street
Old National Bank Building (c. 1866), 295 E. Broad Street, "Gothic-inspired", stuccoed but in pattern resembling masonry
Athens Savings Bank (c. 1885), now the Charles Parrott Insurance Agency, 283 E. Broad Street, Richardsonian Romanesque
stone obelisks, one to commemorate Elijah Clarke and the Revolutionary War, one to commemorate the Civil War and veterans from Clarke County who died in the War, in the center of Broad Street
Kenwin Building (c. 1890), 125 E. Clayton Street
Haygood Building (c. 1885), 151 E. Clayton Street
Building at 216-220 E. Clayton Street
Michael Brothers (now Davison's) (1921), 320-350 E. Clayton Street, designed by Neel Reid
Austin Furniture Company, 361 E. Clayton Street
Building at 351 E. Clayton Street
Building at 263-288 Lumpkin Street and 104-106 E. Washington
The Georgian Hotel (c. 1908), 247 E. Washington Street (photo 20 in 2006 documentation), five-story Classical Revival building designed by A. Ten Eyck Brown
Athens Fire Station No. 1 (1912) still functioning as a fire station in 1977
Athens City Hall, a two-story yellow brick Renaissance Revival style building with a clock tower (photo 18 in 2006 documentation)Athens City Hall - June 2012
United States Post Office and Courthouse (1941), in Stripped Classical style (photo 22 in 2006 documentation)
First Presbyterian Church (1856), Greek Revival-style (photo 22 in 2006 documentation
The boundary increase of 1984 added buildings on the west side of Lumpkin Street. Its seven contributing buildings are two-story commercial buildings with party walls, in a 1-acre (0.40 ha) area. One was the Georgia Theatre, an Art Deco movie theater from the 1920s, and the other buildings then held retail stores, offices, a printing shop, and a laundry.[1][3]
The revision in 2006 added new area, removed some area, and added additional documentation. The increased area, roughly bounded by Dougherty St., Thomas St., Hickory St., Broad St. South St. and Pulaski St., was 24 acres, with 25 contributing buildings and one other contributing structure. It includes Federal and Greek Revival architecture, and some work of architect A. Ten Eyck Brown and some property controlled by the U.S. Postal Service. Historic functions included: domestic; commerce/trade; government; religion; recreation and culture; industry/processing/extraction; health care
Historic subfunction: single dwelling; business; city hall; religious structure; theater; communications facility; clinic.[1][4]