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Willow Grove, also known as the Clark House, is a historic plantation house located near Madison Mills, Orange County, Virginia. The main brick section was built about 1848, and is connected to a frame wing dated to about 1787. The main section is a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story, six-bay, Greek Revival-style brick structure on a high basement.
South of the junction of VA 637 and 603 over North Fork of Roanoke River: Ironto: Bridge removed in 1995 2: Harrison-Hancock Hardware Company Building: November 13, 1989 (#89001877) March 19, 2001: 24 E. Main St: Christiansburg: Demolished in 1995 3: Montgomery White Sulphur Springs Cottage: November 13, 1989 (#89001884) March 19, 2001
Piney Grove at Southall's Plantation was established in the eighteenth century as a seat of the Southall family. During the late eighteenth century, the 300-acre (1.2 km 2) plantation was owned by Furneau Southall. The original log portion of Piney Grove was built before 1790 as a corn crib, later converted and enlarged into a general ...
By the end of the 19th century, McCormick's company had built a primitive combine, which could harvest grain even faster and cheaper than older reapers. Prior to the invention of the reaper, farmers could harvest only 0.5-acre (0.20 ha) a day; using this machine, farmers could harvest 12 acres (4.9 ha) a day, with less manual labor.
Willow Grove Inn (officially known as The Inn at Willow Grove [2]) is a hotel in Orange, [1] Virginia, United States. The basic structure of the building was built by Joseph Clark in 1778. In 1820, his son added a brick wing.
Maple Grove Farm is a historic farm property on Boners Run Road in Shawsville, Virginia. The farm complex includes an early 20th-century Colonial Revival farmhouse and a number of outbuildings, including a small log house that dates to the early period of the property's agricultural use. The property also includes a small mill complex.
Willow Grove is a historic home located at Greensboro, Caroline County, Maryland, United States. It is one of the few Georgian-style houses in Caroline County that were constructed between 1780 and 1790. It is a two-story brick house covered with a thin coat of stucco, measuring 37 feet long and 34 feet deep.
The Jack's Creek Covered Bridge was designed by Walter G. Weaver of Woolwine and constructed in 1914 by Charlie Elam Vaughn [3] of Buffalo Ridge, made of oak, built to serve Jack's Creek Primitive Baptist Church for which the bridge was named. Vaughn's great, great grandfather fought in the Revolutionary War.