[1] The original district included 20 city blocks and nine partial city blocks, and was bounded by the Chattahoochee River on the west, Ninth Street on the north, Fourth Avenue (U.S. Highway 27) on the east, and Fourth Street on the south.
[2] The expanded district included 343 contributing buildings, one other structure, three sites, and one object (an 1879 Confederate war memorial).
[3] Fifteen of the historic houses had been moved but were still deemed to contribute to the historic character of the district.
[3] It includes the antebellum octagon house at 527 1st Avenue, a National Historic Landmark, named Octagon House or May's Folly.
This article about a property in Georgia on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.