*** Welcome to piglix ***

Courtview

Courtview
Courtview 2010.jpg
The building in 2010.
Rogers Hall is located in Alabama
Rogers Hall
Rogers Hall is located in the US
Rogers Hall
Location Court St., Florence, Alabama
Coordinates 34°48′21″N 87°40′46″W / 34.80583°N 87.67944°W / 34.80583; -87.67944Coordinates: 34°48′21″N 87°40′46″W / 34.80583°N 87.67944°W / 34.80583; -87.67944
Area 1 acre (0.40 ha)
Built 1855 (1855)
Architect John Ballinger
Architectural style Greek Revival
NRHP reference # 74000415
Added to NRHP June 13, 1974

Rogers Hall, also known as Courtview, is a three-story antebellum house at 500 Court Street in Florence, Alabama. It was built from 1854 to 1855. It is one of the oldest historic landmarks on the University of North Alabama campus and one of the university's most distinctive structures. The building was recorded by the Historic American Buildings Survey from 1934–35. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on June 13, 1974.

The Greek Revival-style mansion was constructed for George Washington Foster, a prominent local with plantations in Alabama, Georgia, and Mississippi. Located at the summit of Court Street and the highest point in Florence, Foster named his residence Courtview. Because construction would result in the permanent obstruction of a major thoroughfare, Foster had to secure the approval of the Alabama Legislature before work could begin. Permission was granted with the stipulation that "the beauty of the home justify the inconvenience caused the people of the city." He had the grounds professionally landscaped by the Hastings firm out of Atlanta.

Foster died in 1878, with the property going to his daughter, Sarah Independence Foster, and her husband, Stirling Payne MacDonald. MacDonald was a former captain in the Confederate Army. According to the diary of Sarah Foster MacDonald, the grounds were occupied by camps of Confederate and Union soldiers during the American Civil War. Union Army officers, under the command of William Tecumseh Sherman, stayed in house on November 3, 1863. Confederate generals P. G. T. Beauregard, Nathan Bedford Forrest and Stephen D. Lee visited the home in 1864. General Forrest, his wife, and son stayed with the Foster family for several days.


...
Wikipedia

...