This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Macon County, Alabama.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Macon County, Alabama, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for many National Register properties and districts; these locations may be seen together in an online map.[1]
There are 16 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the county, including 2 National Historic Landmarks.
This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted June 14, 2024.[2]
[3] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed[4] | Location | City or town | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Archeological Site No. 1MC110 | December 14, 1985 (#85003118) |
Address Restricted | Tuskegee | ||
2 | Atasi Site | April 18, 1977 (#77000210) |
Address Restricted | Shorter | ||
3 | Butler Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church | August 28, 1995 (#95001022) |
1002 N. Church St. 32°25′07″N 85°41′58″W / 32.4186°N 85.6994°W | Tuskegee | ||
4 | Creek Stand A.M.E. Zion Church Cemetery | April 26, 2016 (#15000432) |
Slim Rd. off County Road 10 32°17′24″N 85°29′23″W / 32.2901°N 85.4896°W | Creek Stand | ||
5 | Creekwood | April 13, 1989 (#89000310) |
Society Hill Rd., 0.4 miles (0.64 km) north of County Highway 10 32°18′00″N 85°28′46″W / 32.3°N 85.4794°W | Creek Stand | c. 1844 | |
6 | Grey Columns | January 11, 1980 (#80000364) |
399 Old Montgomery Rd. 32°25′27″N 85°41′59″W / 32.424291°N 85.699596°W | Tuskegee | Built in 1857, Grey Columns now serves as the home of the president of Tuskegee University. | |
7 | Macon County Courthouse | November 17, 1978 (#78000495) |
E. Northside and N. Main Sts. 32°25′28″N 85°41′27″W / 32.4244°N 85.6908°W | Tuskegee | ||
8 | Macon County High School | November 16, 2020 (#100005781) |
500 East Main St. 32°33′38″N 85°39′45″W / 32.5605°N 85.6625°W | Notasulga | Currently serves as Notasulga High School | |
9 | Main Street Historic District | March 12, 1984 (#84000650) |
Main St. 32°25′22″N 85°41′23″W / 32.4228°N 85.6897°W | Tuskegee | ||
10 | North Main Street Historic District | March 7, 1985 (#85000445) |
600, 615, and 616 N. Main, 101 and 110 E. Water, 700 Water, 701 Maple, and 811 N. Maple Sts. 32°25′46″N 85°41′40″W / 32.4294°N 85.6944°W | Tuskegee | ||
11 | St. Paul Baptist Church and Armstrong School | July 5, 2023 (#100009106) |
14650 Cty. Rd. 2 32°14′23″N 85°40′28″W / 32.2397°N 85.6744°W | Tuskegee vicinity | ||
12 | Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church and Rosenwald School | August 6, 2010 (#10000522) |
7 Shiloh Rd. 32°31′41″N 85°40′40″W / 32.5280°N 85.6778°W | Notasulga | ||
13 | Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church Cemetery | April 5, 2016 (#15000433) |
State Route 81 at Pistol Range Rd. 32°31′08″N 85°40′55″W / 32.5188°N 85.6819°W | Notasulga | ||
14 | Tuskegee Airmen National Historic Site | November 6, 1998 (#01000284) |
c/o Tuskegee Institute, PO Drawer 10 32°27′33″N 85°40′48″W / 32.4592°N 85.68°W | Tuskegee | National Historic Landmark District, historic training site for African-American pilots and crewmen during World War II (before the US Air Force was a separate branch of the service and before desegregation). | |
15 | Tuskegee Institute National Historic Site | October 15, 1966 (#66000151) |
1 mile (1.6 km) northwest of Tuskegee on U.S. Route 80 32°25′49″N 85°42′28″W / 32.4303°N 85.7078°W | Tuskegee | One of the best-known historically black colleges and universities in the United States, Tuskegee was founded by Booker T. Washington in 1881. It began with a curriculum designed to provide industrial and vocational education to African Americans and featured such acclaimed educators as George Washington Carver.[5] Tuskegee Institute is also a National Historic Landmark. | |
16 | Tuskegee Veterans Administration Hospital | March 19, 2012 (#12000140) |
2400 Hospital Rd. 32°26′43″N 85°42′47″W / 32.4452°N 85.7131°W | Tuskegee | Part of the United States' second generation of veterans hospitals; multiple property submission. |