Post on 30-Mar-2016
description
205 Woodward Ridge DriveMount Holly, NC 28120
Style and utility are masterfully fused together in the gourmet kitchen with everything a chef
would desire! This fantasy kitchen features a smooth top
range, glass front custom cabinets, lustrous granite
counters, a tile backsplash, GE Profile wall ovens and a walk-in
pantry. This kitchen also features, recessing lighting, 18”
durable flooring, a Butler’s pantry and a breakfast bar with
designer pendant lighting.
Dine in luxury in the opulent formal dining room with an octagonal tray ceiling, polished hardwood flooring and a shimmering chandelier.
This dining room also offers an extensive moulding package, two large windows and an added transom window. Incorporating these windows
into the floor plan allows for the added value of natural light and a warm setting
The Kitchen & DiningThe Kitchen & Dining
The Great RoomThe Great Room
Entertain guests in the grandiose great room with a soaring vaulted ceiling, a cozy stone gas fireplace, soft neutral carpet, architectural columns and a cooling ceiling fan. Relax
in the media room with dark painted walls, speakers, neutral carpet and a gorgeous custom made rain glass door. In the home office, you will find custom glazed cabinetry
galore, soft close drawers and a desirable home manager area.
The Sunroom & Living RoomThe Sunroom & Living Room
Relax in the cozy living room with a designer paint color, a cooling ceiling
fan and plush neutral carpeting.
The sunroom off of the kitchen has excellent natural light, ceramic tile flooring and views of the wooded
backyard.
The Master Suite
The luxurious master retreat is a part of a split bedroom floor plan and provides ultimate privacy with a short hallway into the bedroom. This master bedroom offers a soothing oasis of special conveniences and comforts at day’s end with extensive moulding, a magnificent tray ceiling, art niche and a large walk-in closet. Indulge in
the lavish master bathroom with a dual sink vanity, large walk-in tiled shower and a deep garden tub. This spa like bathroom also features a calming paint color, water closet upgraded fixtures and ceramic tile flooring.
The Secondary BedroomsThe Secondary Bedrooms
Stepping Outdoors
The Yard & GardenThe Yard & Garden
History of Gaston County, North Carolina
Gaston County is a county located just west of Charlotte, North Carolina. It is the third largest county, by population, in the Charlotte Metropolitan Area, officially designated the Charlotte-Gastonia-Rock Hill Metropolitan Statistical Area. As of 2010, the population was 206,086. It is the fourth-largest county in the Charlotte metropolitan area. The earliest European settlers of Gaston County were principally Scots Irish, Pennsylvania Dutch, and English. In the 1750s, Dutch settler James Kuykendall and others con-structed the Fort at the Point at the junction of the Catawba and South Fork Rivers.[5] The fort was built because of ongoing hostilities with the Cherokee, but it was apparently never attacked. Tensions be-tween the settlers and the Native American inhabitants (primarily of the Catawba tribe) were eased con-siderably when the boundary dispute between North Carolina and South Carolina was settled in 1772, after which most of the Catawba settled on a reservation near Fort Mill, South Carolina.
Most early farms were small, cultivated primarily by farmers of English ancestry. North Carolina's colo-nial policy restricted the size of land grants, and in Gaston County they tended to be about 400 acres (1.6 km2) each. One of the earliest grants in the area was given to Captain Samuel Cobrin, command-er of a local militia company, on September 29, 1750.
Between 1845 and 1848, Gaston County experienced an industrial boom. During this three-year period, the first three cotton mills in the County were established. Some authorities say that the first one was established by Thomas R. Tate on Mountain Island, near the present site of Duke Energy's Moun-tain Island Dam and Hydroelectric Station. Other sources say that the first mill was established by the Linebergers and others on the South Fork River near McAdenville.