Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Dry Fork Plantation

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Nearest city
  
Coy, Alabama

Architectural style
  
Early Republic

Opened
  
1834

Built
  
1834

NRHP Reference #
  
99000250

Added to NRHP
  
26 February 1999

Dry Fork Plantation

Architect
  
Hezekiah; Tait, James, et al.

Address
  
153, County Rd 12 E, Camden, AL 36726, United States

Similar
  
Hawthorne House, Tait–Ervin House, Tristram Bethea House, Cedar Grove Plantation, Allen Grove

Dry fork plantation


Dry Fork Plantation is a historic plantation house in Coy, Alabama. The two-story wood-frame house was built between 1832 and 1834 in a vernacular interpretation of Federal style architecture. It was built for James Asbury Tait by two slaves, Hezekiah and Elijah. The floor plan is centered on a hall that separates four rooms, two on each side, on both floors. Tait recorded in his daybook that the house required 25,000 board feet (59 m3) of lumber, the roof was covered with 6,000 wooden shingles, and the chimneys and foundation required 12,000 bricks, made from clay on the plantation. Dry Fork is one of the oldest houses still standing in Wilcox County and remains in the Tait family. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on February 26, 1999.

Contents

A true southern home dry fork plantation


References

Dry Fork Plantation Wikipedia