Stone Plantation

The Stone Plantation, also known as the Young Plantation and the Barton Warren Stone House, is a historic Greek Revival-style plantation house and one surviving outbuilding along the Old Selma Road on the outskirts of Montgomery, Alabama. It was added to the Alabama Register of Landmarks and Heritage on September 28, 2000 and to the National Register of Historic Places on December 31, 2001.[1][2]

Stone Plantation
Side view of the main house in 1937, prior to restoration
Nearest cityMontgomery, Alabama
Coordinates32°21′2″N 86°25′31″W
Area2.8 acres (1.1 ha)
Built1852
ArchitectBarton Warren Stone
Architectural styleGreek Revival
NRHP reference No.01001411[1]
Significant dates
Added to NRHPDecember 31, 2001
Designated ARLHSeptember 28, 2000

History

The two-story brick masonry house, fronted by a monumental Doric hexastyle portico, was built circa 1852 by Barton Warren Stone. He was born on March 24, 1800, the son of Warren Henley Stone of Poynton Manor in Charles County, Maryland and Martha Bedell of North Carolina. His parents established a plantation, "Magnolia Crest", in Lowndes County in the 1830s. It still survives a few miles west of this plantation. Barton Stone's plantation house, known to his family simply as the "Home Place," was one of three plantation houses that he owned. His other two houses were "Duck Pond" and "Prairie Place." By 1860 he owned 83 slaves and 5,000 acres (2,000 ha) in Montgomery County, with an additional 2,000 acres (810 ha) in Autauga County. He survived two wives and all but one of his sons, dying on January 14, 1884.[3][4] The property was acquired by L.C. Young in 1901 and then by Jesse D. Baggett in 1933.[5]

gollark: Oops, discordness.
gollark: They are NOT there all the time, that's basically their main flaw.
gollark: Yes. You can observe people doing mourning and its effect on their behaviour and such. You can observe the effect of *belief in* the afterlife, but not the afterlife itself unless you have a model of it which is actually... interactable with.
gollark: If there's no way to actually detect or interact with it, i.e. it existing is indistinguishable from it not existing, the question of "does it exist" is not very meaningful.
gollark: You can use advanced "multiplication" technology to compute "expected value".

See also

References

  1. "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  2. "Properties on the Alabama Register of Landmarks & Heritage". Alabama Historical Commission. www.preserveala.org. 4 June 2009. Retrieved 3 February 2010.
  3. Stone, William Oliver (January 2007). "The Slave Population and Farming of the Stone Plantations of Lowndes and Montgomery Counties 1840-1865" (PDF). Pintlala Historical Association Newsletter. XXI (1).
  4. Stone, William Oliver (April 2007). "The Slave Population and Farming of the Stone Plantations of Lowndes and Montgomery Counties 1840-1865 (Part 2)" (PDF). Pintlala Historical Association Newsletter. XXI (2).
  5. "Stone-Young-Baggett House, County Road 54 (Old Selma Road), Montgomery, Montgomery County, AL". Historic American Buildings Survey. National Park Service. Retrieved 3 February 2010.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.