1407 Lemmon-Frost House (1887-88):

Queen Anne, built by R. M. Lemmon and later owned by D. C. Drost, whose wife was active in the Lynchburg Art Club.

 


1415 Smith-Campbell House (1887-88):

Queen Anne, built for G. W. Smith and later bought by Archer Campbell ho, in 1917, hired architect Wm. R. Burnham to remodel the house.


1416 Handy House (1897):

Italianate, built for N.B. Handy, the present Italianate style dates from 1912 when he had architects Burnham & Cave do an extensive remodeling.


1418-20 Kean-Jackson House (c. 1855):

Gothic Revival, antebellum. R. G. H. Kean was head of the Bureau of War for the Confederacy and was married to Thomas Jefferson’s great granddaughter.

 


1421 Tyree-Slaughter House (1856):

Italianate, antebellum. Samuel Tyree purchased the triangular lot between Grace, Pearl and Harrison Streets in 1853 and built this house. Note that the front of the house faces Washington Street, to which the garden originally extended. In 1879, Mrs. Tyree edited recipes and housekeeping tips collected from ladies throughout Virginia in "Housekeeping in Old Virginia," now a collector’s item. This was also the home of Dr. Samuel Garland Slaughter (1860-1915), first to bring the X-ray to Lynchburg.