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Results for Homestead

The Elston Homestead

Built in the year 1835 by Major Isaac Compton Elston. A soldier in the War of 1812 and Black Hawk War. He was then in his thirty-ninth year, a pioneer merchant, banker and financier.

Presented to Wabash College by Major Elston's ...

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Hubbell Homestead

Family compound occupied

by farm, mills, stores

and homes since Milow and

Polly (Faulkner) Hubbell

settled here in 1848.

Listed on State and National Registers of Historic Places

Marker is on New York Route 30 0.6 miles north of E Hubbell Hill Road (County Road ...

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Crockett Homestead

One mile south, on south side of East Branch of Mulberry Creek, David Crockett built a log house in which he lived from 1811 to 1813. While here he hunted, and cleared a field three miles northwest on "Hungry Hill." ...

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Van Wyck Homestead Museum

From 1776-1783, this house was the center of the Fishkill Supply Depot, which also included barracks for 2,000 men. General Israel Putnam occasionally headquartered here. Revolutionary War Heritage Trail

Marker can be reached from U.S. 9 near Interstate 84, on the ...

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Van Wyck Homestead

1732

Supply depot for Continental

Army in Rev. War.

Used as officers Headquarters

1776 - 1783

Marker is at the intersection of U.S. 9 and Interstate 84, on the right when traveling north on U.S. 9.

Courtesy hmdb.org

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Frost Homestead

This house was built

by James Frost in 1834,

using reclaimed portions

from the Featherstonhaugh

Mansion built in 1808

Marker is at the intersection of Mariaville Road (County Route 159) and Batter Street (County Route 94), on the right when traveling west on Mariaville Road. ...

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U.S. Homestead

A federal New Deal project to move families back to the land during the Great Depression. Homes had water, electricity, barn, chicken coop, cellar and garden. Community had school, store, gas station, workshops, lumber mill, and quarry. U.S. government built ...

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The DeWitt Family / The DeWitt Log Homestead

Side A: The DeWitt Family

Zachariah Price DeWitt was born of a Dutch family in New Jersey in 1768. With brothers Jacob and Peter, he migrated to Kentucky where, in 1790, he married Elizabeth Teets, who was born in Pennsylvania in ...

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Jacob Kinsey (Kintzy) Homestead

Ninety feet north of this spot stood the first log house in this community, erected in the year 1795 by Jacob and Elizabeth Kemp Kinsey (Kintzy) who were born in Germany in 1769. The homestead contained 439 acres and 87 ...

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The Stearns Homestead

[Marker Front]:

This 48-acre farm is the last remnant of an agricultural way of life that characterized Parma Township well into the 20th century. The farmhouse, built circa 1855 by Western Reserve settler Lyman Stearns, is representative of the Greek ...

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