- Source: Much Haddam
Much Haddam is a Federal style brick house, built about 1820 just outside Middleburg, Virginia by Richard Cochran. The two-story brick house is located on the Ashby's Gap Turnpike, near the west end of Middleburg, and is a prominent landmark to those approaching Middleburg from the west.
History
Cochran built Much Haddam on lands next to his property, which he called "Capitol Hill." The house was apparently a speculative venture, since Cochran sold it immediately upon completion to William Swart. Swart sold the house to William F. Broaddus in 1835, who sold it on to Mary P. Waugh in 1840. Waugh sold in 1866 to Robert C. Leechman, followed by several more owners. In 1966 the house was purchased by Emily N. K. Church Hutchinson, who named the house Much Haddam.
Description
Much Haddam is a five-bay center-hall house. The two-story brick house stands on a prominent stone basement when seen from the downhill side of its sloping site. The roof is standing seam metal. An ell from the rear was originally one story, but was raised to two stories at the beginning of the twentieth century. The ell once had a log extension, which has disappeared. The grounds include an unusual two-story kitchen outbuilding.
Much Haddam was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on December 28, 1990.
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- William Gillette
- Much Haddam
- Haddam
- Haddam, Connecticut
- Middleburg, Virginia
- Nathan Hale Schoolhouse (East Haddam)
- National Register of Historic Places listings in Loudoun County, Virginia
- Connecticut Yankee Nuclear Power Plant
- David Brainerd
- Goodspeed Musicals
- Haddam Meadows State Park