Snelson-Brinker House

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Snelson-Brinker_House an entity of type: Thing

Snelson-Brinker House was a historic home located near Steelville, Crawford County, Missouri. It was built by Levi Lane Snelson in 1834, as a one-story, double-pen log dwelling, and sold to John B. Brinker in 1837. Later that year, the property was the site of the murder of Brinker's two-year-old daughter Vienna, for which Mary the slave became the youngest person to be executed in Missouri history. The house was extensively rebuilt in the late 1980s. Also on the property are the log and frame smokehouse/root cellar (c. 1880), a cast iron pump (c. 1910), an open field and beyond the field is a cemetery with graves dating back to the 1830s. The property was eventually operated by the St. James Historical Preservation Society as a historic house museum. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Snelson-Brinker House
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Snelson-Brinker House
rdf:langString Snelson-Brinker House
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xsd:integer 52628315
xsd:integer 1090746326
xsd:date 2007-06-21
rdf:langString Double-Pen Log Dwelling
rdf:langString Ruins of the house
rdf:langString Route 8, near Steelville, Missouri
rdf:langString Missouri#USA
xsd:integer 7000576
xsd:string 37.94888888888889 -91.50111111111111
rdf:langString Snelson-Brinker House was a historic home located near Steelville, Crawford County, Missouri. It was built by Levi Lane Snelson in 1834, as a one-story, double-pen log dwelling, and sold to John B. Brinker in 1837. Later that year, the property was the site of the murder of Brinker's two-year-old daughter Vienna, for which Mary the slave became the youngest person to be executed in Missouri history. The house was extensively rebuilt in the late 1980s. Also on the property are the log and frame smokehouse/root cellar (c. 1880), a cast iron pump (c. 1910), an open field and beyond the field is a cemetery with graves dating back to the 1830s. The property was eventually operated by the St. James Historical Preservation Society as a historic house museum. The Snelson-Brinker House is significant as a campsite and gravesite during the period of the Trail of Tears. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2007. It burned down on July 4, 2017, due to vandalism.
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xsd:gYear 1834
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