Results for Horton House Historic Site
Horton House Historical Site
A Legacy Continues
The plantation that Christophe D...
Horton House Historic Site
Warehouse Ruins
Jekyll Island was vey isolated from ...
Horton House Historical Site
A Legacy Continues
The plantation that Christophe D...
Horton House Historic Site
the French Emigre'
By the end of the 18th century, W...
Horton House Historic Site
Warehouse Ruins
Jekyll Island was vey isolated from ...
Results for Horton House Historic Site
Horton House Historical Site
A Legacy Continues
The plantation that Christophe Du Bignon
established at the beginning of the nineteeth
century had its good and bad years.
When Christophe's youngest son, Henri,
married Ann Amelia Nicolau in 1808, they were
given 40 acres of planted cotton. This was ...
Horton House Historic Site
Warehouse Ruins
Jekyll Island was vey isolated from St.
Simons and Brunswick in the 18th & 19th
centuries. Due to this isolation the du Bignon
family was mostly self-sufficient, as were
previous owners of the island such as William
Horton.
What is now visible in this ...
Horton House Historical Site
A Legacy Continues
The plantation that Christophe Du Bignon
established at the beginning of the nineteeth
century had its good and bad years.
When Christophe's youngest son, Henri,
married Ann Amelia Nicolau in 1808, they were
given 40 acres of planted cotton. This was ...
Horton House Historic Site
the French Emigre'
By the end of the 18th century, William
Horton's small farm had become a large and
prosperous plantation. After Horton's death, the
island had several owners prior to the arrival
of Christophe Anne Poulain du Bignon in 1791.
Christophe du Bignon was ...
Horton House Historic Site
Warehouse Ruins
Jekyll Island was vey isolated from St.
Simons and Brunswick in the 18th & 19th
centuries. Due to this isolation the du Bignon
family was mostly self-sufficient, as were
previous owners of the island such as William
Horton.
What is now visible in this ...