The Hodge-Cook House is a historic house at 620 North Maple Street in North Little Rock, Arkansas. It is a 1+1⁄2-story wood-frame structure, with clapboard siding and a hip roof pierced by hip-roof dormers on each side. A gable-roof section projects from the right side of the front, with a three-part sash window and a half-round window in the gable. A porch extends across the rest of the front, supported by tapered Craftsman-style fluted square columns. The house was built c. 1898 by John Hodge, a local businessman, and is one of the city's finest examples of vernacular Colonial Revival architecture.
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| - The Hodge-Cook House is a historic house at 620 North Maple Street in North Little Rock, Arkansas. It is a 1+1⁄2-story wood-frame structure, with clapboard siding and a hip roof pierced by hip-roof dormers on each side. A gable-roof section projects from the right side of the front, with a three-part sash window and a half-round window in the gable. A porch extends across the rest of the front, supported by tapered Craftsman-style fluted square columns. The house was built c. 1898 by John Hodge, a local businessman, and is one of the city's finest examples of vernacular Colonial Revival architecture. (en)
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| - Location in Arkansas##Location in United States (en)
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| - The Hodge-Cook House is a historic house at 620 North Maple Street in North Little Rock, Arkansas. It is a 1+1⁄2-story wood-frame structure, with clapboard siding and a hip roof pierced by hip-roof dormers on each side. A gable-roof section projects from the right side of the front, with a three-part sash window and a half-round window in the gable. A porch extends across the rest of the front, supported by tapered Craftsman-style fluted square columns. The house was built c. 1898 by John Hodge, a local businessman, and is one of the city's finest examples of vernacular Colonial Revival architecture. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1993. (en)
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