Old Virginia Homestead: Difference between revisions
Public wiki for the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition
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{{ | {{SHORTDESC:Old Virginia Homestead}} | ||
{{Infobox FairBuilding | {{Infobox FairBuilding | ||
| name = Old Virginia Homestead | | name = Old Virginia Homestead |
Latest revision as of 00:38, 28 November 2022
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Location | The Trail |
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No. of Buildings | 1 |
Construction | |
Proft | $1,500 ($45,239 in 2021) |
Entry | |
Adult Entry | 10¢ ($3 in 2021) |
An 1803 one-room log cabin from the Virginian farm of statesman Patrick Henry located along The Trail.
Before the Fair[edit | edit source]
Description[edit | edit source]
The logs were chinked with clay, the old-fashioned wooden chimney, the split shingles, the horseshoe over the door, the gourd on the brackets, all similar to a standard cabin of 1803. The old-fashioned split bottomed chair is shown at the door occupied by a great-grandmother, claiming 101 years, knitting after the fashion of one hundred years ago. Carding, spinning and weaving with old hand machines were demonstrated to visitors. Among the relics was a flint-lock gun two hundred years old which was owned by Governor Berkely, and a chair brought over in the Mayflower.