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Arthur Boyd Hancock III (born February 22, 1943, in Nashville, Tennessee) is an American owner of Thoroughbred racehorses, the owner of Stone Farm, a 2,000 acre (8 km 2) horse breeding operation in Paris, Kentucky, and a composer of Bluegrass music. Hancock is a member of one of the pre-eminent American horse racing families.
Also located on the property are a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story, stone grist mill (c. 1728), an early-nineteenth-century, 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story, fieldstone, tenant house, a large, late-eighteenth-century stone-and-frame barn, a stone pig pen, and a two-story, stone horse barn. The grist mill was purportedly built by George Boone III, the grandfather of ...
The complex consists of the one-and-one-half-story, stuccoed, sandstone mill, which was erected in 1843, a two-and-one-half-story, stucco over stone farmhouse that was built sometime around 1830, a one-and-one-half-story, stucco over stone, brick and frame summer kitchen that was erected sometime around 1830, a stone and frame barn that was built circa 1850, two small barns that were built ...
Locke's Mill, Berryville, Virginia, Colonial-era grist mill on the Shenandoah River. Grinding a variety of grains including certified organic, powered by water wheel. McCormick Mill, Raphine, Virginia, grist mill located on the Cyrus McCormick Farm. Causey's Mill, Causey Mill Park, Newport News; George Washington's Gristmill, Mount Vernon
The farmhouse and farm buildings are in one range. They are built in sandstone with a Kerridge stone-slate roof, are in two storeys, and have a five-bay front. The right two bays comprise the farmhouse and contain sash windows. The left bay projects slightly forward. In the farm buildings there are square pitch holes. [32] II: Summerclose ...
Walter Klepzig Mill and Farm is a historic farm and sawmill and national historic district located in the Ozark National Scenic Riverways near Eminence, Shannon County, Missouri. The district encompasses three contributing buildings, three contributing sites, and one contributing structure associated with an early-20th century Ozark farm and mill.
This farm has three contributing buildings and one contributing structure. They are the miller's house, a one-and-one-half-story, stone-and-frame grist mill, which was erected in 1805, a stone-and-frame bank barn, which was built circa 1840 and the head and tail races.
Historic England, "Splashy Mill, Stone Rural (1038973)", National Heritage List for England; Historic England, "Turnover Bridge (canal bridge number 100) circa 500 metres to north-west of Meaford Farm, Stone Rural (1374236)", National Heritage List for England