Venues CNC
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Heights House (Montfort Hall / Boylan Mansion)
Montfort Hall is a registered historic landmark in the Boylan Heights neighborhood of Raleigh, North Carolina. It is one of the few mansions in the state's Capital that survived the American Civil War. An example of Italianate architecture, it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978 as Montford Hall, and was designated as a Raleigh Historic Landmark in 1968 as Boylan Manson. It now operates as Heights House a 9-room boutique inn. Architectural Significance English architect Williams Percival came to Raleigh in 1857 to work on the First Baptist Church, completed in 1859. Over three years he drew plans for 11 different sites around the state. Including North Carolina's State Capital, Caswell County Courthouse, and The Barracks in Tarboro, North Carolina. Montfort Hall's interior centerpiece is a rotunda supported by four Corinthian columns and lit by...

Haywood Hall House & Gardens
Welcome to Haywood Hall House and Gardens a historic home and private wedding venue located in the Historic District of Downtown Raleigh, NC

Pullen House
Pullen House is a historic Victorian plantation house located in northern Raleigh, North Carolina. The house was the center of a small plantation in Wake County that was owned by the Pullen family. Richard Stanhope Pullen, a local businessman and philanthropist who funded the construction of Pullen Park, was born here. History Built in the 1800s, it was a modest plantation owned by the Pullen family. The house, now located within the Raleigh city limits, was part of the Neuse Community, named after the nearby Neuse River. Richard Stanhope Pullen, a noted businessman and philanthropist, was born at the house in 1822. Pullen was responsible for funding the development of Pullen Park and was a major benefactor of North Carolina State College, the Peace Institute, the North Carolina Woman's College, and Edenton Street United Methodist Church. The house includes a 600-square foot formal living room. ...

Norris‑Heartt House
Norris-Heartt House, also known as Norris House and Heartt House, is a historic Victorian house in Raleigh, North Carolina. The home was built in 1879 and was given as a wedding present for the socialite Cornelia Alice Norris. Following her death in 1935, it was purchased by Leo D. Heartt and converted into a boarding house. It was acquired by the state government in 1968 and housed the offices of the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation and the North Carolina State Office of Archaeology. It was vacated in 2007. The house underwent renovations from 2016 to 2018 and is now used as a private event venue. History Norris-Heartt House was constructed on North Blount Street in 1879 by Alexander Boyd Andrews and was purchased by Jesse Allen Norris and Amy Ann Adams Norris as a wedding present for their daughter, Cornelia Alice Norris, and her husband, the merchant Matthew Tyson Norris. Her...
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