Concrete Road, Cape Lookout
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Nearest Named Buildings
- - 640 m
https://www.nps.gov/calo/learn/historyculture/surfmen.htm - - 686 m
The 1st floor contains the keeper's room, an office, the crew's room, the storm clothes room, a spare room, and a bathroom. The 2nd floor contains a center hall flanked by two bedrooms. A stair leads to the attic and the cupola.
https://www.nps.gov/calo/learn/historyculture/surfmen.htm - - 669 m
https://www.nps.gov/calo/learn/historyculture/surfmen.htm - - 661 m
https://www.nps.gov/calo/learn/historyculture/surfmen.htm - - 601 m
The interior consists of one large space with a small comer shop on the first floor, and three separate finished rooms in the attic. The building housed rescue equipment and other vehicles.
https://www.nps.gov/calo/learn/historyculture/surfmen.htm - - 644 m
https://www.nps.gov/calo/learn/historyculture/surfmen.htm - - 595 m
https://www.nps.gov/calo/learn/historyculture/surfmen.htm - - 524 m
- - 537 m
Built by Clem Gaskill, a Coast Guardsman in 1915. The Cape Lookout Development Company acquired the property and sold it to Odell Guthrie, another Coast Guardsman, in 1921. Later in 1951 he sold it to Grayer and Barbara Willis. - - 520 m
According to tradition, the house was built in 1928 by a Coast Guardsman for his family. During World War II some Army servicemen were quartered here. Ralph and Evelyn Bryant used it as a vacation cottage in the 1950s. - - 451 m
The house was built about 1930 as a summer cottage by one Mr. Baker. Around 1940 George Allen Holdemess of Tarboro purchased a part-interest, along with several other Tarboro families, who shared use of the cottage for many years.