209 Oxford Eliza Dickey Home
Introduction
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Eliza Dickey purchased the lot in 1875 for $800 and sold it a year later to Thomas McWhinney for $5000, so she was the builder of the house. The house is an outstanding example of townhouse Italianate and has no apparent alternations from the original design. The home is dominated by the projecting pavilion, strong gable end and two story bay, capped by a balustrade. It has tall pedimented windows. Eliza Dickey, the widow of Peter Dickey, who founded an early Franklin grain and lumber company, continued to live in Franklin in a large Italianate house that used to stand on the corner of 6th Street and South Main. McWhinney was the editor of the local newspaper, businessman, and minister of the Christian Church. McWhinney sold the house to Charles Haring in 1886. Harding was a manager of the Harding Paper Mill in Franklin. The 1900 census shows Charles, his wife Mary, four children and one live-in servant here. Charles died in 1900. In 1910, Mary Harding and three children are here, one of them, Hazel, working as a stenographer in a paper mill. Harding’s children continued to live in the house, the last one, J. Fred Harding, dying in 1986. The current complimentary color scheme brings out the architectural details and is probably reminiscent of the fashion in which the house was built. The gargoyles and fence are recent additions.