King-Hooton House


The King-Hooton House is a historic home in Pensacola, Florida. It is located at 512-514 North Seventh Avenue. On August 23, 1991, it was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places.
The King-Hooton House is an 1871, -story,
frame vernacular residence, with an attached kitchen wing.
Originally built as a single dwelling, it was converted into
a duplex in the mid-1950s. It was built by a local
carpenter for Margaret E. King, one of Pensacola's most
prominent real estate holders in the late nineteenth
century. It has three interior, stuccoed, brick chimneys
which pierce front gabled roofs; an inset porch at the main
entrance; and an attached hip roofed porch on the south
elevation. Paired brackets accent the eaves of the main
house. A bay window dominates the main facade; nearly all
of the other windows are wooden, double hung, 6/6 sash.
There are two jib windows. Sixteen pairs of original,
wooden, louvered shutters remain intact and are operable.

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