Horton House
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Horton_House an entity of type: Thing
Horton House (also known as Horton-duBignon House, Brewery Ruins, duBignon Cemetery) is a historic site on Riverview Drive in Jekyll Island, Georgia. The tabby house was originally constructed in 1743 by Major William Horton, a top military aide to General James Oglethorpe. Horton also brewed beer in Georgia's first brewery (the ruins of which are a few hundred yards down the road). This structure has been meticulously preserved over the past 100 years as an example of coastal Georgia building techniques and as one of the oldest surviving buildings in the state.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Horton House
rdf:langString
Horton-duBignon House, Brewery Ruins, duBignon Cemetery
rdf:langString
Horton-duBignon House, Brewery Ruins, duBignon Cemetery
xsd:float
31.10177040100098
xsd:float
-81.41455841064453
xsd:integer
37484673
xsd:integer
1090459224
xsd:date
1971-09-28
rdf:langString
Maj. William Horton
xsd:integer
1743
rdf:langString
Riverview Dr., Jekyll Island, Georgia
rdf:langString
USA Georgia#USA
rdf:langString
Location in Georgia##Location in United States
rdf:langString
yes
rdf:langString
hd
xsd:integer
71000278
xsd:string
31.10177 -81.41456
rdf:langString
Horton House (also known as Horton-duBignon House, Brewery Ruins, duBignon Cemetery) is a historic site on Riverview Drive in Jekyll Island, Georgia. The tabby house was originally constructed in 1743 by Major William Horton, a top military aide to General James Oglethorpe. Horton also brewed beer in Georgia's first brewery (the ruins of which are a few hundred yards down the road). This structure has been meticulously preserved over the past 100 years as an example of coastal Georgia building techniques and as one of the oldest surviving buildings in the state. Across the street from the Horton House ruins is the du Bignon cemetery, a tabby wall surrounding the graves of five people: Ann Amelia du Bignon, Joseph du Bignon, Marie Felicite Riffault, Hector deLiyannis, and George Harvey. Horton House, the Brewery Ruins, and the cemetery were added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1971.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
3539
xsd:double
40063.87858176
xsd:string
71000278
xsd:gYear
1743
<Geometry>
POINT(-81.414558410645 31.101770401001)