
Though out of place among the antebellum and Victorian mansions of Milledge Avenue, this is nonetheless an interesting structure. I’m not sure of the style but would call it Postmodern Dutch, for lack of a better term.

Though out of place among the antebellum and Victorian mansions of Milledge Avenue, this is nonetheless an interesting structure. I’m not sure of the style but would call it Postmodern Dutch, for lack of a better term.

For many years this was the home of Phi Kappa Psi but is now being occupied by Delta Phi Epsilon.
Milledge Avenue Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Built by Charles Phinizy for his wife, this house was later known as the DeFoor House. It’s been home to the Gamma Phi Beta sorority since 1983.
Milledge Avenue Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

This is home to the Beta Theta Pi fraternity.
Milledge Avenue Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Colonel Thomas Hamilton, who is said to have been Georgia’s first millionaire, died while this house was under construction. His widow, Sarah, oversaw its completion. It has been the home of the Phi Mu sorority since 1964.
Milledge Avenue Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

This was built by the first chancellor of the University of Georgia, Andrew A. Lipscomb, for his mother, Mrs. Mary A. Lipscomb. She lived here during her tenure as principal of the Lucy Cobb Institute. It is now home to the Delta Sigma Phi fraternity.
Milledge Avenu Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Milledge Avenue had only been opened for settlement a year before A. P. Dearing built this home, considered one of the finest examples of the Greek Revival in Georgia. The bricks were made near Athens. It has been home to the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority since 1938.
Milledge Avenue Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Originally built in the Second Empire style in the 1870s, this home was remodeled to its present Neoclassical appearance by Professor H. C. White in 1901. It’s now the home of the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity.
Milledge Avenue Historic District, National Register of Historic Places