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Longstreet Farm is a living history farm located at 44 Longstreet Road in Holmdel Township, New Jersey, United States.The farm is 9 of 664 acres within Holmdel Park. [3] It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on November 29, 1979, for its significance in agriculture and architecture. [1]
Longstreet served as a U.S. Marshal of Georgia from 1881 to 1884, but the return of a Democratic administration under Grover Cleveland in 1885 ended his political career and he went into semi-retirement on a 65-acre (26 ha) farm near Gainesville, where he raised turkeys and planted orchards and vineyards on terraced ground that his neighbors ...
The farm was purchased by the Monmouth County Park System in 1967 to preserve the county's rural past. The farm opened to the public in 1972 as Historic Longstreet Farm. [3] Historic Longstreet Farm is a fairly complete example of a typical nineteenth-century farm created by Dutch settlers in New Jersey.
Ardenwood Historic Farm, [1] Fremont, California, Bay Area; California Citrus State Historic Park, Riverside; Orcutt Ranch Horticulture Center, Los Angeles; Rileys Farm, Oak Glen, 17th and 18th c. Living History, Revolutionary War, Civil War & Gold Rush [2] Stein Family Farm / National City Living History Farm Preserve, San Diego; Colorado
The Holmes–Hendrickson House is located at 62 Longstreet Road, adjacent to Holmdel Park, in Holmdel Township of Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States. The historic Dutch-Flemish farmhouse was built around 1754. It was documented as the Hendrick Hendrickson House by the Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS) in 1939. [3]
Once Longstreet's men arrived, Lee planned to shift Hill to the left to cover some of the open ground between his divided forces. [138] Longstreet calculated that he had sufficient time to allow his men, tired from marching all day, to rest and the First Corps did not resume marching until 1:00 am. Moving cross-country in the dark, they made ...
(The farm was owned by R.H. Nelson, but its former owner was named Frayser and many of the locals referred to it as Frayser's, or Frazier's, Farm.) [55] Three Confederate brigades made the assault, but Longstreet ordered them forward in a piecemeal fashion, [56] over several hours. Brig. Gen.
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