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LIFE: HOMES
Home used as former drug store, Guyandotte Women's Club
Dr. Frank Murphy was the father of James Murphy and one of the early pharmacists in Guyandotte. This charming, late Queen Anne, Jacobean-style, 12-room, wood structure was built by local druggist James Murphy between 1895 and 1900.
The three-story, "T"-shape structure with a wing extending to the rear has a two-story bay window with a leaded-glass window in the gable above. Paired brackets rest under the eaves above the bay, a third-story dormer projects from the central roof. A series of ionic columns support the porch roof that ends in an oval shape and is decorated with shingles.
The Murphy family moved its business from Logan, W.Va., by boat and purchased V.H. Page's drug store on Main Street in Guyandotte where meetings took place for the local Democrats. Many heated and often scathing political battles took place in James Murphy's drug store. Later, the home was purchased by Dr. William Nease who reared his children here, and later the Anderson family purchased the home. The interior of the home underwent major alterations when it was used as the Guyandotte Women's Club.
William and Garnett Kahler, Dr. William and Dr. Ruth Sullivan built 1902
Located on Richmond Street near the flood wall, this home built in 1902 is a late Queen Anne style, three-story structure with a series of dormers and a gable with a circular turret on the north end.
This picturesque façade once had a commanding view of the Ohio River until the structure was moved when the flood wall was built. This charming home has a porch with squared tapered columns with a band of spindled railings between them. Decorative clapboard shingles are on the upper stories and a port-cochere is extended over the driveway on the south end.
The house was built by William Kahler as a wedding gift for his wife Garnett Page Kahler. The impressive interior has woodwork in cherry, maple and oak. The Page family settled in Guyandotte in 1872 and was merchants on Bridge Street.
The house was later purchased by the late Dr. William Sullivan, a retired professor at Marshall University and his wife Dr. Ruth Sullivan an international authority on autism, who assisted in the making of the movie "Rain Man." Actors Dustin Hoffman and Tom Cruise were guests in the home. The premiere of the movie was in Huntington.
Huntington author Don Daniel McMillian has spent more than 14 years researching the historic homes, architecture and many of the first families in Cabell County before writing his book "On The Threshold of Splendor: Historic Homes and Families." The book is available at Amazon.com, Empire Books and Richard's Hallmark.
1940s Radio Hour
J. Chris Newberg
First Friday and Second Look Saturday
Lions Arts and Crafts Show
"The Nutcracker"
Christmas Tour of Homes
2nd annual Holiday Candlelight Tour
Marshall Artists Series: "Wizard of Oz"
16th annual Joy to the World Holiday Concert
"Cowboy" Bill Martin