John F. Cates House

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The John F. Cates House, aka The Hill, was built ca. 1859 in Brownsville, Mississippi. The house, which has been in the same family for six generations (its entire history to date), is a vernacular example of the type of Greek Revival architecture built by small farmers in the area during the antebellum years. It is a story-and-one-half, five-bay, side-gabled residence with a gabled portico on the front and a full-width gallery across the back. The basic plan is a center hall with two large rooms on either side; there is also a modern apartment in the half-story, accessible by a stair mounting from the back gallery. The house was sensitively restored in 1989-1992 by the late Marcus Charles Hammack, a descendant of the original builder. The house, which stands on the north side of Mississippi 22, is listed in the National Register of Historic Places and is a registered Mississippi Landmark. Notable features include board-and-batten siding; eight-foot, paneled, single-leaf doors, tongue-in-groove, random width heart pine floors; and a mixture of original pilastered and shouldered-architrave mantels. The house is the sole surviving antebellum structure in Brownsville and was damaged during a Civil War skirmish, when a chimney cap was blown off by an artillery round.



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