The Reed-Dossey House, in Brownsville, Kentucky, is a historic house built around 1890. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986. It is a balloon-frame house with a two-story T-plan, plus a one-story wing. It was deemed notable "as an unusually large and intact example of vernacular late Victorian architecture in a small town in western Kentucky" with well-preserved interior and exterior details.
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| - The Reed-Dossey House, in Brownsville, Kentucky, is a historic house built around 1890. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986. It is a balloon-frame house with a two-story T-plan, plus a one-story wing. It was deemed notable "as an unusually large and intact example of vernacular late Victorian architecture in a small town in western Kentucky" with well-preserved interior and exterior details. (en)
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- Reed-Dossey House (en)
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| - Late Victorian, Vernacular Late Victorian (en)
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| - Upper Main Cross and Jefferson Sts., Brownsville, Kentucky (en)
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| - 37.19277777777778 -86.26972222222223
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| - The Reed-Dossey House, in Brownsville, Kentucky, is a historic house built around 1890. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986. It is a balloon-frame house with a two-story T-plan, plus a one-story wing. It was deemed notable "as an unusually large and intact example of vernacular late Victorian architecture in a small town in western Kentucky" with well-preserved interior and exterior details. The house was built by/for entrepreneur J.P. Reed, who was "reputedly connected with the steamboat traffic on the Green River" and it is believed that Reed intended for the house to be a hotel or boarding house. The house was later operated by the Dossey family as a boarding house; Miss Tandie Mclntyre, a local schoolteacher was a notable boarder. (en)
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| - POINT(-86.269721984863 37.192779541016)
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