Viola Roden-Redin residence: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Viola Redin residence.jpg|right|thumb|375px|The Viola Redin residence]]
The '''Viola Redin residence''', also known as the '''Redin-Cohen House''' or '''Octavus Roy Cohen House''', is a two-story, twin-gabled Tudor-revival style house at 3225 [[Cliff Road]], on the southwest corner of the intersection with [[33rd Street South]] in [[Birmingham]]'s [[Highland Park]] neighborhood. It is a contributing structure to the [[Country Club Historic District]].
The '''Viola Redin residence''', also known as the '''Redin-Cohen House''' or '''Octavus Roy Cohen House''', is a two-story, twin-gabled Tudor-revival style house at 3225 [[Cliff Road]], on the southwest corner of the intersection with [[33rd Street South]] in [[Birmingham]]'s [[Highland Park]] neighborhood. It is a contributing structure to the [[Country Club Historic District]].



Revision as of 16:01, 27 July 2020

The Viola Redin residence

The Viola Redin residence, also known as the Redin-Cohen House or Octavus Roy Cohen House, is a two-story, twin-gabled Tudor-revival style house at 3225 Cliff Road, on the southwest corner of the intersection with 33rd Street South in Birmingham's Highland Park neighborhood. It is a contributing structure to the Country Club Historic District.

The house was constructed around 1918 by Viola Redin, daughter of Benjamin Roden. She and her sisters controlled several parcels in the area. It was originally addressed on 33rd Street, then called Whitaker Street.

The ground floor is veneered with local fieldstone while the upper floor is clad in brick with applied half-timber details. The gabled ends are stuccoed with half-timbering. On the east side, facing 33rd Street, there is a covered porch with dressed stone arches and a cross-gable above. The roof is varicolored slate. The front yard features a sunken fountain.

Within a year or two, Redin sold the house to M. B. and Clema Eiseman. They sold it, in turn, to writer Octavus Roy Cohen in 1923.

Cohen and his wife Inez occupied the house until he moved to Los Angeles, California to pursue a screenwriting career in the mid 1930s. They sold the house in 1937 to Allen and Mary Harris Wood. The Woods sold it to Nick Jones.

References

  • Mansell, Jeff & Christy Anderson (March 11, 2003) "Birmingham Country Club Historic District. National Register of Historic Places, Supplementary Listing Record - approved November 17, 2003
  • Gillon, John (n. d.) "History of 1260 So. 33rd Street." typescript