Mordecai Place Historic District

The neighborhood was named in honor of the plantation, and only whites could live on most of the land (about eighteen acres near the railroad could either be sold for residences for African Americans or used for factories).

[3][4] There are also a few examples of a more typically rural vernacular style, the two-story, side-gabled I-house.

Towards the middle of the twentieth century, smaller Cape Cods and Minimal Traditional houses were built.

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