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James Lee House (690 Adams Avenue, Memphis)

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5-708: The James Lee House , also known as the Harsson-Goyer-Lee House , is a historic house at 690 Adams Avenue in Memphis, Tennessee , United States. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places , together with the adjacent Woodruff-Fontaine House. The two houses are included in the Victorian Village historic district . The 8,100-square-foot home was constructed by William Harsson in 1848. Harsson's daughter, Laura, married Charles Wesley Goyer, who bought

10-482: The Memphis Academy of Art). The city of Memphis took ownership in 1929. After the art school moved to a new location in 1959, the house was vacant for many years. It was used by Canadian indie rock group Tokyo Police Club in a music video for their 2008 song "In a Cave." In 2012 the empty house was purchased by new private owners. The following year, a $ 2 million construction and renovation project began, converting

15-792: The South’s largest, that boasted “the best selected assortment of field hands, house servants, and mechanics … with fresh supplies of likely Young Negroes.” Historic buildings on Adams Avenue include the Calvary Episcopal Church at 102 North Second Street at Adams Avenue; the Magevney House at 198 Adams Avenue; the Mallory–Neely House at 652 Adams Avenue; the Fire Museum of Memphis in Fire Engine House No. 1 at 118 Adams Avenue;

20-557: The house in 1852. Goyer had it expanded by the architecture firm of Edward Culliatt Jones and Matthias H. Baldwin in 1871, after seeing their work in designing the neighboring Woodruff-Fontaine House . James Lee, a riverboat captain who had been educated at Princeton University , bought the house in 1890. In 1925 it became the James Lee Memorial Art Academy, a predecessor of the Memphis College of Art (formerly

25-474: The house into a luxury bed and breakfast . The city of Memphis provided a property tax abatement to encourage its renovation. The bed and breakfast opened for business in April 2014. Adams Avenue Adams Avenue is a historic road in Memphis , Tennessee . Once known as millionaire's row, it was home to numerous mansions, and was where Nathan Bedford Forrest once operated a giant slave market, said to be

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