NRHP Reference # 84000139 Added to NRHP 25 October 1984 | Area 4,000 m² Nearest city Murfreesboro | |
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Architectural style Greek Revival architecture |
Boxwood, also known as the Thomas J.B. Turner House, is an antebellum plantation house in southwestern Rutherford County, Tennessee, near Murfreesboro in the historic Salem community.
The house was built by Thomas J. B. Turner and his wife, Sarah Jetton Turner, and completed in 1843. It is a two-story brick house built on an I-house plan. Greek Revival architectural influences characteristic of antebellum architecture are evident in its design, which features a divided pedimented portico with square Doric columns and a balustrade. The name of the house derives from the boxwood plantings on the grounds, which are said to have originated with plants that Turner brought to Tennessee in a powder horn.
The Union Army occupied Boxwood during the Civil War.
Boxwood was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.