Mar Lou (Yancey) Phinizy (1851-1926)
daughter of Benjamin C Yancey Jr.
married 1st - Ferdinand Phinizy (1850-1877) and
2nd his relative Charles H. Phinizy (1835-1898)

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| "The three story Georgian
style home was built for his family residence in 1835 by John Phinizy, a
wealthy Augusta merchant and businessman. The original home consisted of
three floors with an oval two story porch and observatory on the west
side of the building. The original home had an outside kitchen which was
connected to the main house by a covered walkway, stables, and four
smaller homes where the parking lot now sits. John Phinizy passed the
home to his son Charles H. Phinizy, whose wife, Mary Lou remodeled the
home in 1885, adding the Victorian interior features such as the parlor
mantles, parquet floors, leather walls in the second floor entry hallway
and beautiful leaded and stained glass windows. Mrs. Phinizy also had
the fourth floor added, and during her declining years had a pulley-type
elevator installed between the first and second floors, which was one
of, if not, the first elevator, installed in a private residence in
Augusta. In 1933, Miss Mary Lou Phinizy, the Phinizy's daughter sold the
home to Henry W. Poteet and Edward Platt Grealish who used the home as a
funeral home. In 1938, they sold the home to Augusta Lodge No. 205,
B.P.O. of Elks. In 1949, the Elks added the two story wing on the west
side of the building adding two large ballrooms. The home was used until
the early 1990's by the Elks as their Club and Conference Center. In
January 1996, William G. Hatcher, Sr., owner of MAU, Inc., began
renovating the main floor of the building...During 1997, the Greene
Street side of the original structure underwent a major facade
renovation. Renovations will continue in and outside the building. "
source:
See also Marion
Hatcher Center |
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Grave Marker and Mausaleum of Charles H & Mary Lou Yancey
Phinizy

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