- Rawl-Couch House
Infobox_nrhp
name =Rawl-Couch House
nrhp_type =
|100px
caption =Rawl-Couch House
location=Batesburg-Leesville, South Carolina
built =1893
added = 1984
architecture=
architect = The Rawl-Couch House is located inBatesburg-Leesville, South Carolina .This two story, asymmetrical frame dwelling is the area's most distinctive Queen Anne residence. The house was originally constructed in 1893 as a Methodist school, then enlarged and remodeled in its present style in 1908 by John Jacob Rawl, using modified George F. Barber plans to include the one room school house as the new dining room. The house has a one story wraparound porch, supported by turned posts, with an elaborate arched spindle frieze and turned balusters. A three story shingle clad turret, with a conical roof rises at the left side of the facade; it is a balanced by a gabled pavilion on the right, with an intricately sawn bargeboard. A second floor balcony between the turret and the pavilion has a spindle frieze, repeating that of the main porch. The foundation of the house is brick; the roof is original sheet metal shingles. Two corbeled chimneys pierce the central block's steep hip roof. A multi-paned transom and side lights enframe the front door.
John Jacob Rawl and his son David built the house for his widowed daughter-in-law, Mrs. Annie Rawl, who had been married to his son, Ed. Ed Rawl died in an accident at one of his father's planing/lumber factories in Florida.
In the 1930s, the house was purchased by D.E. Couch as a family home.
In the early 80s the home went through a renovation and update.
In the 1980s, the Steigner-Hendrix family bought the home.
In 1984, the home was entered into the National Registry of Historic Homes along with most of the downtown and several other notable homes in the immediate area.
In 2007, the Davis Family purchased the home.
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