he Drish House: Echoes of Elegance in Tuscaloosa, Alabama
Some buildings carry their history visibly. The Drish House carries it in every column, every arch, every shadow that falls across its perfectly symmetrical facade on a quiet Tuscaloosa evening.
Built in 1837 for Dr. John R. Drish, a prominent Tuscaloosa physician and planter, the Drish House is one of the finest surviving examples of Italianate antebellum architecture in Alabama. Its four Ionic columns, arched ground-floor windows, and distinctive square cupola — rising above the roofline like a watchtower over the surrounding neighborhood — give the structure a commanding presence that has endured nearly two centuries of Alabama history. The house has served as a private residence, a church, and today stands as one of Tuscaloosa's most recognized and beloved historic landmarks.
It is also, by local legend, one of Alabama's most famously haunted buildings — the ghost of Mrs. Drish said to appear in the cupola windows on certain nights, candles burning as they did at her husband's deathbed. Whether you believe the stories or not, there is something undeniably atmospheric about this place, especially captured in black and white under a flat, grey Alabama sky.
Shot head-on from the street, "The Drish House: Echoes of Elegance" lets the architecture speak for itself — the perfect symmetry, the ornate details, the quiet dignity of a structure that has outlasted everything around it.
Bring the history, elegance, and enduring mystery of one of Tuscaloosa's most iconic landmarks home with this museum-quality fine art photography print by Bama Price — available as metal, canvas, or glossy paper.