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The Robert Lee Hardy House is a historic house at 207 South Main Street in Monticello, Arkansas. It was designed for Robert Lee Hardy, a prominent local lawyer, by Knoxville, Tennessee-based architect George Franklin Barber, and built c. 1908–1909, at a time when Monticello was a thriving commercial center. It is unusual for its construction material (brick), and for its elaborate yet restrained Classical and Colonial Revival styling. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.

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  • Robert Lee Hardy House (en)
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  • The Robert Lee Hardy House is a historic house at 207 South Main Street in Monticello, Arkansas. It was designed for Robert Lee Hardy, a prominent local lawyer, by Knoxville, Tennessee-based architect George Franklin Barber, and built c. 1908–1909, at a time when Monticello was a thriving commercial center. It is unusual for its construction material (brick), and for its elaborate yet restrained Classical and Colonial Revival styling. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982. (en)
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  • Robert Lee Hardy House (en)
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  • Robert Lee Hardy House (en)
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  • less than one acre (en)
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  • Arkansas#USA (en)
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  • Location in Arkansas##Location in United States (en)
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  • 33.626666666666665 -91.79055555555556
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  • The Robert Lee Hardy House is a historic house at 207 South Main Street in Monticello, Arkansas. It was designed for Robert Lee Hardy, a prominent local lawyer, by Knoxville, Tennessee-based architect George Franklin Barber, and built c. 1908–1909, at a time when Monticello was a thriving commercial center. It is unusual for its construction material (brick), and for its elaborate yet restrained Classical and Colonial Revival styling. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982. (en)
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  • 82002113
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  • POINT(-91.790557861328 33.626667022705)
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