Pebble Hill, also known as the Scott-Yarbrough House, is an antebellum cottage in Auburn, Alabama listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
The Creek Nation struggled to possess their land, and in 1836, the United States suspended the Treaty of Cusseta due to ongoing violence.
The structure was built in the Greek Revival style with hand-hewn heart of pine floors and joists and rafters held together by wooden pegs.
Absentee owners managed Pebble Hill until Mary Virginia Riley purchased the land in 1876.
As Auburn grew in population, parts of Pebble Hill's land would be sold for commercial development.
[3] The Auburn Heritage Association purchased Pebble Hill from the Yarbrough family for restoration in 1974.
As a result of recent renovations, Pebble Hill now has an additional house on the property that neighbors the main settlement; the building is used for assembly events.
The main house's interior contains multiple 19th and 20th-century artifacts, ranging from portraits and art to old Alabama maps.