The West End Historic District in Waxahachie, Texas is a 77-acre (31 ha) historic district that was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986.[1] It is mainly seven blocks of W. Main St. and four blocks of W. Jefferson St., and includes properties on cross streets as well (see map on page 67 of NRHP document).[2]
F. Lee Hawkins House (photo #73 on page 37), L-plan Victorian made more formal by two-story portico with massive Corinthian-capped columns
E. P. Hawkins House, 200 S. Hawkins St. (photo #74 on page 39), L-plan Victorian made more formal by two-story portico with massive Corinthian-capped columns
Mahoney-Thompson House (photo #75 on page 41)
Dunlap-Simpson House (c.1891), 1203 W. Main St. (photo #78 on page 47), Classical Revival, built by Connecticut contractor Dennis Mahoney for Judge Oscar E. Dunlap, longtime president of Waxahachie National Bank. It is a 2+1⁄2-story house with Queen Anne detailing and a three-story tower.
Dunlap House, 1203 W. Main, (c. 1891. Dunlap-Simpson House.
Harrison House, 717 W. Main St. (photo #79 on page 49), with Mission-style parapet
First Presbyterian Church, 501 W. Main St. (photo #80 on page 51)
Chapman House, 903 W. Main St. (photo #81 on page 53)
Hines House, 813 W. Main St. (photo #82 on page 55)
Chaska House, 716 W. Main St. (photo #84 on page 59).[2]
^ ab"National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: West End Historic District". National Archives. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help) (accessible by searching within National Archives Catalog)