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  2. Elliston, Newfoundland and Labrador - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elliston,_Newfoundland_and...

    Elliston is an incorporated fishing settlement situated on the Bonavista Peninsula of Newfoundland, Canada.Incorporated in 1965, the town of Elliston was once called Bird Island Cove and it is composed of a number of communities, North Side, Noder Cover, Elliston Centre, Elliston Point, Porter's Point, Sandy Cove, The Neck and Maberly.

  3. Wessells Root Cellar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wessells_Root_Cellar

    Wessells Root Cellar is a small brick structure near Hallwood, Accomack County, Virginia. The root cellar was built sometime after 1768 by William Vessells as a structure separate from the main house, which burned in 1937. The cellar is of fine quality and has remained in the Wessells family for more than two hundred years.

  4. Root cellar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Root_cellar

    Two traditional sod-covered potato cellars in southeastern Idaho. Root cellars are for keeping food supplies at controlled temperatures and steady humidity.Many crops keep longest just above freezing (32–35 °F (0–2 °C)) and at high humidity (90–95%), [1] but the optimal temperature and humidity ranges vary by crop, [1] and various crops keep well at temperatures further above near ...

  5. The Root Cellar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Root_Cellar

    The Root Cellar is a children's historical novel by Janet Lunn that is set in the 1980s, although much of the action takes place in the 1860s. It follows Rose Larkin, an orphan, who travels temporally back and forth between Ontario, Canada, of the 1980s and various settings of U.S. Civil War in the 1860s.

  6. List of historic places in the Bonavista Bay region - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_historic_places_in...

    Tom Porter Root Cellar Municipal Heritage Structure Elliston NL 48°37′56″N 53°02′12″W  /  48.6322°N 53.0366°W  / 48.6322; -53.0366  ( George Pearce Root Cellar Municipal Heritage Structure

  7. Troy (Dorsey, Maryland) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Troy_(Dorsey,_Maryland)

    Troy was inherited by Basil Dorsey in 1714, followed by Caleb Dorsey who reduced the land to 1,016 acres (411 ha) which was split into two unequal parts in 1760 and given to Sarah Dorsey and Thomas Dorsey. Thomas Dorsey would use the root cellar as a meeting place with Benjamin Warfield of Cherry Grove during the revolutionary war. [3]

  8. Pence-Carmichael Farm, Barn and Root Cellar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pence-Carmichael_Farm...

    The Pence-Carmichael Farm, Barn and Root Cellar are a pair of historic farm outbuildings in rural western White County, Arkansas. They are located just east of the hamlet of Romance, off Arkansas Highway 31 on Carmichael Lane. The barn is a two-story wood-frame structure, with a weatherboarded exterior and stone pier foundation.

  9. Root Cellar (poem) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Root_Cellar_(poem)

    In eleven lines of free verse, "Root Cellar" consists almost in its entirety of images of the root cellar. The poem highlights the "dank" humidity of its setting and engages with a range of the reader's senses. The verse abounds with dynamic visual imagery of the roots, bulbs, and stems practically growing before the eyes of the speaker.