Alston-DeGraffenried Plantation

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Alston-DeGraffenried_Plantation an entity of type: Thing

Alston-DeGraffenried Plantation or Alston-DeGraffenried House is a historic property located in Chatham County, North Carolina, near Pittsboro, North Carolina. It includes a plantation house built through the forced labor of at least 11 enslaved people between about 1810 and 1825, and its surrounding agricultural fields. The property was first listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974 and the listed area was increased in 1993. The house and the surrounding land are identified as a national historic district. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Alston-DeGraffenried Plantation
rdf:langString Alston-DeGraffenried Plantation
rdf:langString Alston-DeGraffenried Plantation
xsd:float 35.73305511474609
xsd:float -79.24333190917969
xsd:integer 22713507
xsd:integer 1089317470
xsd:date 1974-11-18
rdf:langString Broome, Meleus
rdf:langString Georgian, Federal, Federal vernacular
rdf:langString ca. 1810-1825
rdf:langString West of Pittsboro off U.S. 64; also the northern side of U.S. Route 64, 0.4 miles west of its junction with NC 1564, near Pittsboro, North Carolina
rdf:langString North Carolina#USA
rdf:langString yes
rdf:langString hd
xsd:integer 93001132
xsd:string 35.73305555555555 -79.24333333333334
rdf:langString Alston-DeGraffenried Plantation or Alston-DeGraffenried House is a historic property located in Chatham County, North Carolina, near Pittsboro, North Carolina. It includes a plantation house built through the forced labor of at least 11 enslaved people between about 1810 and 1825, and its surrounding agricultural fields. The property was first listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974 and the listed area was increased in 1993. The house and the surrounding land are identified as a national historic district. The district encompasses seven contributing buildings, two contributing sites, and one contributing structure. They include the main house, kitchen, pig boiling pit, four-seat privy, smokehouse, two-seat privy, corn crib, small barn, well shelter, and the surrounding landscape. The main house is a two-story, five bay, Georgian/ Federal style dwelling. It sits on a raised brick basement and has a tall hipped roof. It has a full-width Victorian porch and a number of one-story rear additions. The house was built for Delia Alston by her father, Joseph John "Chatham Jack" Alston, at the time of Delia's marriage to John Baker DeGraffenried. It was one of six homes that Alston, one of the largest landowners and enslavers in the area, built for his children. He also built nearby Aspen Hall.
xsd:date 1993-10-21
xsd:integer 74001339
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 5005
xsd:string 93001132
xsd:gYear 1810
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