The Cooke Office Building is a Victorian example of second empire architecture. It includes a mansard roof and an asymmetrical plan popular at that time.
Built in 1887 by Rice P. Cammack. Originally used as a hotel it was integral to the history…
Built around 1852 for the Louisa Methodist Episcopal Church and the upper story for the Masonic Day Lodge #58. After the Battle of Trevilian Station the wounded were brought here. The furniture was moved to serve as a makeshift hospital.
This beautiful eighteenth century home is believed to be one of the oldest buildings in the Town. It was once a part of the “Courthouse Tract†land that was sold in 1807 to Henry Lawrence. This was the longtime residence of Mrs. Ada Fannagan who…
The jail was the fifth for the county operating from, 1868 to 1967. It was constructed in 1868 after a fire in which an inmate almost died burned the interior of the previous jail. This happened to several of the earlier jails as well. The bricks,…
The current Courthouse was built in 1905 it’s the fourth in a series of Courthouses standing as the centerpiece of the town. A Colonial Revival Structure, it was designed by D. Wiley Anderson an accomplished Architect from Richmond. The stone…
Built in 1860 by Edwin Lee Smith, a local dentist. The house was sold in 1913 to the Boxley family.
In 1918 architect D. Wiley Anderson remodeled the home for the Boxley family. The renovations included: the addition of a dining room, a kitchen,…
Braxton Joe
Brown Stephen
Shelton Jacob Blacksmith
Jackson Solomon
Shepherd Jim
Brown Joe
Brown Nelson
Tinsley Overton
Tinsley John
Tinsley Wyatt
Tinsley William
Lewis Lansey
Jackson Moses
Hill Jacob
Hill…
Walton, Andrew G
Watson, Mrs Ann
Watson, Mrs. Susan D.
Watson, Dd & M.M. Taylor
Watson, Thomas S
Same Gdn John Z. H. Rawlings
Same Gdn Jas. M. Rawlings
Same Trust Mrs. F. C. Watson & Child
Watson, Miss Virginia H.
Walton, Benjn J.
Walton,…