Girish Mahajan (Editor)

DeJarnette's Tavern

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Built
  
1780 (1780)

NRHP Reference #
  
07000398

Designated VLR
  
March 7, 2007

Area
  
1 ha

Architectural style
  
Colonial

VLR #
  
041-0067

Opened
  
1780

Added to NRHP
  
2 May 2007

DeJarnette's Tavern httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Location
  
4080 Stagecoach Rd., Nathalie, Virginia

DeJarnette's Tavern, also sometimes called DeJarnette House, Daniel DeJarnette Tavern, or Staunton River Hunt Club, is a nationally registered historic place near Nathalie, Halifax County, Virginia. This wooden structure with stone foundations and chimneys was built in the late eighteenth century, perhaps about 1780, and consists of one and one-half stories, with a supra-attic and cellar. Most of the first floor was occupied by a large tavern room.

History

The tavern served as a stagecoach station, and perhaps as a mustering location for Revolutionary War soldiers. It is named after Daniel DeJarnette, who was the son of Revolutionary War captain, James Pemberton DeJarnette. Several accounts indicate that Daniel DeJarnette may have won the tavern in a contest of strength or wrestling.

According to a 1980 newspaper story:

The DeJarnette tavern is believed to have attracted a sports minded clientele – those interested in horse racing, card playing, cock fighting and the like. One rumor about the house that has been passed down through the generations is that a Yankee peddler was killed and buried there. One version of the legend has the peddler buried under the house, and another has him lying under the large rocks which go out from the front porch toward the highway.

References

DeJarnette's Tavern Wikipedia