Results for Homestead
National Historic Landmark- Trujillo Homestead / Zapata Ranch
After the United States annexed Mexico’s n...
Historic Homestead Townhall Museum
The Museum exists to provide its culturally diverse commun...
Franklin Pierce Homestead
“…I shall never cease to remember my birthpla...
Homestead Meat Shop and Smokehouse
The Homestead Meat Shop and Smokehouse was bu...
Homestead Dwellings
The most common building type found in the Am...
The Grimes Homestead
This house, constructed in the late 18th century...
Jackson Homestead
The Jackson Homestead is a well-preserved Federa...
Cook Homestead
This plot marks the site of the home of John Cook, pioneer...
The Homestead Grounds
Andrew Johnson National Historic Site
There are no w...
Van Keuren Homestead
Burned by British Oct. 17,
1777. Rebuilt and occup...
Results for Homestead
National Historic Landmark- Trujillo Homestead / Zapata Ranch
After the United States annexed Mexico’s northern territories in 1848, the new American citizens of the Southwest moved north and east. One of these Hispano Americans was Teofilo Trujillo, who settled with his wife in the San Luis Valley ...
Historic Homestead Townhall Museum
The Museum exists to provide its culturally diverse community with information about past human thought and activity, which supplies critical context for analysis of persistent themes and significant issues to the present. The Museum collects, preserves and interprets objects and ...
Franklin Pierce Homestead
“…I shall never cease to remember my birthplace with pride as well as affection, and with still more pride shall I recollect the steady, unqualified and generous confidence which has been reposed in me by its inhabitants.” – Franklin ...
Homestead Meat Shop and Smokehouse
The Homestead Meat Shop and Smokehouse was built around 1868, and was used to process meat for the several communal kitchens in the village of Homestead. Most butchering was done in the fall and winter, and meat was smoked ...
Homestead Dwellings
The most common building type found in the Amana Colonies, the dwellings reflect the simple lives of their residents. Several original dwellings, mostly brick, remain in Homestead today. Amana Colony houses were typically rectangular, one-and-a-half-story buildings built with the ...
The Grimes Homestead
This house, constructed in the late 18th century, was home to the Grimes family, a Quaker family active in the New Jersey antislavery movement. Dr. John Grimes (1802-1875), the most noted and vociferous antislavery advocate in the family, was ...
Jackson Homestead
The Jackson Homestead is a well-preserved Federal-style house in Newton, Massachusetts. Corroborating written reminiscences and oral tradition provide evidence that the house served as a station on the Underground Railroad. Timothy Jackson (1756-1814) built the family homestead in 1809 ...
Cook Homestead
This plot marks the site of the home of John Cook, pioneer settler, who with his wife Diantha J., and children Freddie W., Mary E., and John W., were murdered by Indians April 26, 1872.
Marker can be reached from County ...
The Homestead Grounds
Andrew Johnson National Historic Site
There are no written records describing the Homestead grounds as Andrew Johnson knew them from 1869 until 1875. The earliest descriptions of the landscape during that period come from the oral accounts of Andrew Johnson’s descendants ...
Van Keuren Homestead
Burned by British Oct. 17,
1777. Rebuilt and occupied
by direct descendants of
original owner since then.
Marker is on St. James Street, on the right when traveling east.
Courtesy hmdb.org