P.O. Box 2741
Wilson, NC 27894-2741

Phone: (252) 234-7694
Email: info@preservationofwilson.com
Properties

      More Details Price: $25,000
207 Bragg Street
207 Bragg Street
One of the most intact example of the several similar gable front, two-story frame dwellings built at the turn of the century.  Built by brothers Stephen W. and Wade H. Anderson for rental or speculative property in the early twentieth century.

      More Details Price: $19,500
506 Broad
303 Daniel Street
The L. E. Bunn House was built circa 1913 as a single family home. The house is a double-pile, hip-roofed cottage with classical details. 

      More Details Price: $69,900
106 gray 
106 Gray Street
This handsome brick bungalow was built between 1922 and 1925. It has a large front porch and screened-in back porch. A utility shed is located in the rear of the fenced-in yard. You will find a spacious living room with fireplace and built-in wiring for mantel lighting.

  More Details Price: $117,000
311 West Green Street
301 W. Green Street
This brick Gothic Revival Church was designed by Wilson architect Solon Balias Moore and constructed by Jones Brothers in 1920. The Church is presently occupied. In addition to the unique rehabilitation plan for this structure, restoration work will include deferred maintenance.

  More Details Price: $26,500
306 West Green
306 W. Green Street

The two-story, single-pile Barfoot House, circa 1879, follows a form often referred to as an I-house, popular throughout Eastern North Carolina during the late nineteenth century. 


      More Details Price: $161,000
historic church package 
Historic Church Package
Plan for the future with this church package. A brick Gothic Revival Church, a secondary building for fellowship and a lot for parking.

      More Details Price: $57,500
103 Jackson
103 North Jackson Street
This handsome structure was built between 1897 and 1903. The building is conveniently located within walking distance to the downtown commercial district, including the Wilson County Courthouse.

      More Details Price: $37,500
206 Jackson
206 Jackson Street

The John Aycock House, circa 1890, is a Queen Anne cottage with locally unusual cross gables and bracketed cornice.  The porch has been remodeled and the exterior is asbestos veneer.  The interior has three fireplaces, six rooms, large kitchen, washer/dryer connections, and unique architectural features.


  More Details Price: $17,500
407 West Lee
407 Lee Street

Like the other modest, on-story frame dwellings in this turn of the century neighborhood, this house was built along traditional lines and has a cross-gable roof.  The interior has many architectural features that are still intact.


  More Details Price: $5,000
202 Maplewood 
202 Maplewood Avenue
Built circa 1903 and typical of Wilson's modest turn-of-the-century Victorian cottages. Many of the historic features are still intact including four fireplaces.

      More Details Price: $17,000
310 Tarboro 
310 N. Tarboro Street
Built sometime around 1897, this turn of the century house is a one-story, double-pile house which is sheltered beneath a hip roof that is unusually tall for Wilson.

Reduced.  Mark an offer today!   More Details Price: $33,500
311 Tarboro 
311& 313 N. Tarboro Street
Built in 1922, this bungalow duplex offers similar two story units each having a living room, dining room, kitchen, two bedrooms, one full bath along with beautiful woodwork.

      More Details Price: $12,000
212 Vance Street
212 W. Vance Street
Circa 1895, Blacksmith George Purvis (1849-1926) purchased this lot in December 1894 and had this typical, one-story, Victorian, frame cottage built soon thereafter.

      More Details Price: $22,000
300 Vance Street
300 W. Vance Street
This transitional Queen Anne Colonial Revival style, two-story frame dwelling was erected circa 1898 for Charles W. Gold, a son of prominent Primitive Baptist minister and publisher P. D. Gold.

      More Details Price: $185,000
503 Vance Street
503 W. Vance Street
The Colonial Revival structure contains ten townhouses, arranged in five identically finished pairs beneath a hip roof.  Each pair is six-bays wide and has a central, two-bay, projecting entrance. 
 

      More Details Price: $92,000
109 Whitehead Avenue
109 Whitehead Avenue
Built in 1907 for tobacconist William Carr (1867-1930), a principal in the firm of Cozart, Eagles and Carr, the operators of the Centre Brick Tobacco Warehouse, this large, two-story frame residence is a handsome example of the large Colonial Revival houses that were building in the Whitehead Place neighborhood in the early twentieth century. 

Sold Properties


"Save this Old House"

This Old House
Magazine, June 2011

SOLD
$20,000
  More Details

Price: $45,000
304 vANCE 
304 W. Vance Street
The Gold Harrell House is an impressive Queen Ann style house built circa 1884 for prominent Wilson minister and publisher Pleasant Daniel Gold (1833-1920) by one of Wilson’s foremost builders, James W. Wilkins. 
SOLD $76,500     More Details Price: $76,500
210 Tarboro Street
210 N. Tarboro Street
Built between 1893 & 1897 this 1 ½ story frame Queen Anne cottage is one of the few houses in Wilson covered with German siding.
 

SOLD $75,200   More Details Price: $89,500
115 Whitehead 
115 Whitehead Avenue
This bungalow, circa 1910, is one of only a few entirely stuccoed bungalows in Wilson. Landmark status offering 50% reduction in local property taxes.
 

 
"Save this Old House"

This Old House Magazine, March 2010
SOLD
$19,900
  More Details List Price: $35,000
219 Broad Street
219 Broad Street
This Greek Revival cottage was built in 1913 as a single family home and later converted into a duplex, with a third unit in the walk-out basement. The house is located on a corner property with a slight elevation which brings charm and interest to the property.

 
SOLD $90,000   More Details List Price: $125,000
501 Broad 
501 Broad Street
Built in 1898, this outstanding flamboyant Queen Anne style architecture was designed by nationally-known architect George Barber. Original mantels, stair banister and newel posts remain. Turned spindle decoration remains over the door that leads from the hall to the rear of the house.

 SOLD    $6,000   More Details  List Price: $9,500
210 Moss
210 Moss Street
This Colonial Revival house was built in 1913. It is a large two-story home with great potential. There are five bedrooms upstairs and one downstairs. The porch has one of the best views in Wilson.

SOLD $12,000   More Details List Price: $49,500
315 Green 
315 W. Green Street
Built in 1902, this Colonial Revival home is part of the Old Wilson Historic District located in Wilson, NC, approximately 40 miles outside of the Raleigh area.

SOLD $65,000   More Details List Price: $85,000
107 & 109 Bragg Street

109 Bragg
107 & 109 Bragg Street
These two properties are located on the same .593 acre lot and may be subdivided creating two separate parcels.

The Colonial Revival brick building was a former convent and offers a great opportunity as a multi-family dwelling.

The one-story frame house and its wrap-around porch is ready to be converted back to single family living.

SOLD:  Restoration Partners $17,900   List Price: $17,900
201 bragg 
209 Bragg Street
Built in 1902, this Colonial Revival home is part of the Old Wilson Historic District located in Wilson, NC, approximately 40 miles outside of the Raleigh area.

SOLD:
Restoration Partners
$63,000   More Details List Price: $175,000
209 Broad Street
209 Broad Street
The C. W. Stokes House, circa 1925, was designed by architect, S. B. Moore for Stokes, a Wilson clothing merchant. It is a clipped-gable, brick-veneered bungalow with a porte-cochere, one and ½ story with a brick-veneered first floor and a stuccoed upper story.

These historic properties are located in Wilson, NC. All structures are sold in "as-is" condition with a Rehabilitation Agreement and Protective Covenants.

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