Herbert B. Hunter

[1] Hunter established his own firm in High Point, North Carolina in the early 1920s.

[1] He was an early member of the North Carolina Chapter of the American Institute of Architects and was pictured among the group at the annual meeting in Charlotte in 1929.

[1] President Franklin D. Roosevelt selected him to make the drawing for the White House Oval Room.

In Kinston he also designed a Tudor Revival architecture mansion: the Harvey C. Hines House (late 1920s).

[2] Hunter's obituary ran in the Asheville Citizen on April 2, 1976 and notes buildings at Mount Mitchell State Park, a residential project for James B. Duke, and houses in Blowing Rock, North Carolina and Charlotte.