
Horace B. Bryant House
House. Contributing, by 1926.
Tudor Revival style one and one-half story house with a steeply pitched clipped gable roof. Walls are stucco. Shed roof dormer at the front, and an engaged entry stoop at the southwest corner. Stoop has square posts. Windows are double and triple multi-light casements, and the front door is multi-light-over-panel, a possible replacement. One-story wing at rear. House is sited on a hill above the street, with large trees, and a brick retaining wall on the south side of the drive. Horace B. Bryant, a salesman, and wife Florine lived here from 1941 to 1942. Fred W. Streetman, an insurance agent, and wife Frances lived here from 1943 to 1944. In the late 1940s Mack P. Spears, a lawyer, and wife Maude lived in the house. Good condition.
(Sanborn maps, city directories)
Garage. Contributing, by 1926.
One-story frame building with a steeply pitched clipped gable roof.

Kenneth Katzenmoyer House
Contributing, by 1926.
Tudor Revival style two-story plus basement house with side gable roof and projecting clipped gable roof bay at the northeast corner. Skylights added. Two interior chimneys have chimney pots. Walls are stucco. Entry stoop has an arched doorway. Fence in front of house picks up the curved design of the arched entry. Windows are multi-light casement, and the front door is a multi-light circle over panel. Small lot with mature trees drops to the rear. Brick retaining wall at the south side of driveway. Garage is located at the northeast corner of the house, below the main level. Ray Yeomans, a salesman, and wife Nelle lived here from 1941 to 1942. Kenneth Katzenmoyer, the production manager at Chipman-LaCrosse Hosiery Mills, and wife Eloise lived here from 1943 until at least 1949. Good condition.
(Sanborn maps, city directories)

Justice-Brittain House
Contributing, by 1926.
Vernacular Bungalow style one-story-plus-basement house with a clipped, cross gable roof. Walls are German siding. Attached stoop has a clipped gable roof with boxed returns supported by columns. Windows are four-vertical-over-one and casement. Front door is louvered (probably a replacement of the original) and sidelights. Small lot drops away to rear. Garage is located beneath house at the northeast corner. Basement walls are brick. The Hendersonville Real Estate Company, developers of the neighborhood, sold Lot #136 of the Druid Hills plat to A. C. Justice on November 23, 1925 (Deed Book 126, 230). The house was built by February 15, 1926, by the Justice family (Deed of Trust Book 103, 3). A default on the loan occurred on May 12, 1928, and the Insured Mortgage Bond Corporation (holders of the mortgage) sold the property to Lewis Barber (Deed Book 195, 94). On July 1, 1931, Barber sold the property to Imperial Mortgage Company (Deed Book 195, 487), who then sold it to Greyling Realty Corporation on July 17, 1931 (Deed Book 195, 486). Greyling Realty sold the house to National Bondholders Corporation in 1936 (Deed Book 214, 115) and National Bondholders sold it to Louise W. and McAvoy Brittain soon thereafter (Deed Book 214, 118). McAvoy Brittain was a salesman with Gulf Oil Corporation and Louise Brittain was a teacher. Good condition.
(Sanborn maps, city directories, Henderson County deed books)

Harry C. Price House
House. Contributing, by 1926.
Two-story bungalow with an irregular floor plan. Steeply pitched side gable roof with shed roof dormer at the northwest corner. Original brick veneer appears to have been stuccoed over on the first floor, with aluminum siding on the second floor. Siding has been replaced in soffits also. Engaged entry porch at northwest corner, with a replacement balustrade. Windows are double hung, but may be replacements. Front door is multi-light. Located on a hill above the street with granite slab steps to the front walkway. Harry C. Price, a teacher at the high school, and his wife Elizabeth lived here beginning in 1941. John E. and Hilda A. Wood lived here from 1945 to 1946. F. A. Barber, Jr. and wife Iva lived here in the late 1940s.

House. Non-contributing, ca. early 1950s.
One-story-plus-basement style house with side gable roof and projecting front gable bay at the northeast corner. Wing on the south side has garage beneath. Walls are asbestos shingle with scalloped board panels in the gable ends, probably original to the house. Windows are six-over-six and the front door is modern. Small lot slopes away to the rear.
(Sanborn maps, city directories)