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Methodist Church Annex

Used as a meeting hall, this Bungalow structure, built in 1929, was formerly an annex to the 1904 church. In 1949, Herbert Stoneburg paid to move it to its present site as a wedding gift to his son Marvin, who ...

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Randolph Allum House

Built in 1915, this Classical Revival home was moved to its present site in 1923. Randolph Allum lived here in the early 30s.

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Millworker Rental House

This Carpenter Gothic home was built in 1890 from scraps of wood from the local Booth-Kelly Mill. This home used to be a rental home for mill workers.

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Clark-Moser House

This rural vernacular farmhouse with gabled roof with windows equal-distant from the centered front door, is a simplified version of a European cathedral.

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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.

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Woods-Goodman House

One of the few Queen Anne style houses in Coburg, this modest house was built and lived in by R.T. Woods, banker of the Coburg State Bank. Woods left the bank before it dissolved in 1927. Later, Jack Goodman, an ...

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Diamond House

This Gothic-style home, built in 1890, was the retirement residence of pioneer John Diamond, one of Coburg’s earliest pioneers. This Drury house was built by Walter Drury, early pioneer and father of George Drury.

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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 ...

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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 ...

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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 ...

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