Captain Jonathan Stone House
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Captain_Jonathan_Stone_House an entity of type: Thing
The Captain Jonathan Stone House is a historic residence in the city of Belpre, Ohio, United States. Built just ten years after Belpre's 1789 establishment on the north bank of the Ohio River, it is the oldest existing building in the city.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Captain Jonathan Stone House
rdf:langString
Capt. Jonathan Stone House
rdf:langString
Capt. Jonathan Stone House
xsd:float
39.27096176147461
xsd:float
-81.57689666748047
xsd:integer
30299172
xsd:integer
1090928155
xsd:date
1978-02-07
rdf:langString
Jonathan Stone
xsd:integer
1799
rdf:langString
Front of the house
xsd:integer
612
rdf:langString
Ohio#USA
xsd:integer
78002209
xsd:string
39.27096 -81.5769
rdf:langString
The Captain Jonathan Stone House is a historic residence in the city of Belpre, Ohio, United States. Built just ten years after Belpre's 1789 establishment on the north bank of the Ohio River, it is the oldest existing building in the city. Born in 1751, Jonathan Stone joined the Continental Army early in the American Revolutionary War. After the Treaty of Paris, he moved to the Belpre vicinity. He and his family built a fortification on their land during a war with local Native Americans in the early 1790s; it was known as "Stone's Fort." As the Belpre region developed, Stone became a leading member of the area's society; he was elected treasurer of Washington County, and he was one of the three commissioners chosen to survey lands for the future Ohio University in Athens to the west. Stone's house in Belpre is a two-story structure; except for a small wing on the rear northwestern corner, it is a rectangular building. The entire structure rests on a foundation of sandstone, and it is covered by a metal roof. Among its owners since Stone have been Dr. Thomas and Janet Barrett. At some point after Stone's life, the house was moved to its present location at 612 Blennerhassett Avenue. In 1978, the Stone House was listed on the National Register of Historic Places because of its historically significant architecture; it was seen as historic because of its place as a rare surviving example of Ohio's earliest residential architecture. It is one of four Belpre locations on the Register, along with the Charles Rice Ames House, the Sixth Street Railroad Bridge, and . Capt. Jonathan's son, Colonel John Stone, was another occupant of the house. He was an abolitionist with a bounty on his head offered by defenders of slavery in the state of Virginia; he therefore did not cross the river to Parkersburg (in what is now West Virginia) for more than 20 years. He is known to have "spirited many escaped slaves northward toward Canada".
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
4137
xsd:double
4046.8564224
xsd:string
78002209
xsd:gYear
1799
<Geometry>
POINT(-81.57689666748 39.270961761475)