From The Archives
c. 1900 Victorian
Scotland Neck, North Carolina 27874
Gilliam-Pritchard House
Victorian Italianate in the heart of town on 1.5 acres. Originally built in 1863, this historic property combines stunning architectual features with modern comfort.
Scroll down below the map for more information
Scroll down below the map for more information
2 Stories | |
Bedrooms | 5 |
Full Baths | 3 |
Half Baths | 2 |
Heated Sq. Ft. | 4,180 |
Unheated Sq. Ft. | 0 |
Acres | 1.5 |
Lot Size | 150X400 |
Features.
- 1st Floor Bath
- 1st Floor Bedroom
- Attic
- Breakfast Room
- Crawl Space
- Den
- Dining room
- Entry Hall
- Kitchen
- Laundry Room
- Living room
- Master bedroom downstairs
- Fenced Yard
- Fresh paint
- Garden
- Porch
- Rear Deck
- Restored exterior
- Storage Building
- Storm Windows
- Workshop
- Built-in Bookcases
- Built-in Cabinets
- Carpet
- Ceiling Fans
- Ceramic Tile
- Fireplaces
- Gas Logs
- Grand staircase
- Natural gas fireplace
- Original wood windows
- Vinyl floors
- Walk-In Closet(s)
- Wood floors
- Tin Roof
- Central air
- City sewer
- City water supply
- Dishwasher
- Disposal
- Gas heating
- Heat pump
- Range
- Refrigerator
- Water Heater - Electric
- Transoms
- Wainscoting
- 1.5 acres
- 14 ft ceilings
- 2 unused fireplaces
- 2 unused fireplaces
- 3 HVAC systems
- 4 porches
- Bosch dishwasher
- flat lot
- gas range w/2 ovens
- heart of town
- Jenn-Air range plus
- magnificent trees
- Maytag refrigerator
- MBR en suite with porch
- original fixtures
- outside lighting
- plantation windows
- potting shed/smokehouse
- private (not isolated)
- private entry to MBR
- separate fence for pets
- thoroughly landscaped
- Whirlpool W/D
- wonderful family home or retirement retreat
- workshop/storage w/elec
No Contact Information.
This listing is archived and is not for sale.
Contact information is not available for archived listings.
Historic information
The Town of Scotland Neck lists this home as an historic property with the following description:Gilliam-Pritchard-Leggett House
(c. 1860/c.1900/c.1930)
Two-story, single-pile, frame house with Italianate- and Queen Anne-style details; weatherboard siding; side-gable shingle roof; three front gables, each with elaborate sawn gable ornament and diamond-pattern shingles; a pair of nine-over-nine sash windows with a molded cornice located below the larger central gable; twelve-over-twelve sash windows with molded cornices flank the central paired window; symmetrical three-bay facade; central six-panel glazed door with a transom in an architrave surround with paneled pilasters flanked by twelve-over-twelve sash windows; one-story hipped-roof, porch with projecting sections at each of the side bays and a broader projecting section at the central, entrance bay; porch embellished with cut-out frieze, eaves brackets, bracketed chamfered posts, and a sawn balustrade; south-side, one-story, wing with identical porch treatment; two-story rear wing across back; one-story rear ell projects from wing; two interior rear chimneys; documented history begins with Henry Gilliam who purchased a house and three-acre tract in 1863; subsequently went through several additional owners in late nineteenth century; acquired in 1899 by lumberman, T.H. Pritchard, who was responsible for addition of second floor and the house's remodeling; purchased in 1907 by James Wilson and Margaret Leggett who extensively remodeled the house in the 1930's.
Archived in January, 2007
Comments & Feedback
All information deemed reliable but not guaranteed and should be independently verified. All properties are subject to prior sale, change or withdrawal. OldHouses.com is not responsible for any typographical errors, misinformation, misprints and shall be held totally harmless.