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General Nathanael Greene Homestead

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Built
  
1774

Designated NHL
  
November 28, 1972

Opened
  
1774

Added to NRHP
  
7 October 1971

NRHP Reference #
  
71000014

Designated CP
  
September 20, 2010

Area
  
6 ha

Architect
  
General Nathanael Greene Homestead Coventry Rhode Island General Nathanael Greene Homestead photo

Location
  
50 Taft St., Coventry, Rhode Island

Part of
  
Similar
  
General Nathanael Greene H, Governor William Sprague, Paine House, Cady's Tavern, South County Museum

The General Nathanael Greene Homestead, also known as Spell Hall, is a historic house at 20 Taft Street in Coventry, Rhode Island. It was the home of American Revolutionary War general Nathanael Greene from 1770 to 1776, and was owned afterwards by his brother Jacob Greene and his wife Margaret. The house is owned and operated by the General Nathanael Greene Homestead Association, a non-profit organization, and was opened as a museum in 1924.

Contents

General Nathanael Greene Homestead The Nathanael Greene Homestead Clio

Description

General Nathanael Greene Homestead httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

The house is a 2-1/2 story wood frame structure with a gable roof, two interior chimneys, and clapboarded exterior. It is five bays wide and two deep, with a center entry framed by pilasters and topped by a transom window, triangular pediment, and carved fanlight motif. The house follows a typical late-Georgian center-hall plan, with four rooms on each level, two on either side of the central hall. On the lower level, the front right room housed Nathanael Greene's 300+ volume library, while the rear room served as the kitchen. The rooms on the left served as parlor and dining room. There are four bedrooms on the second floor, and the attic space was later also converted into bedrooms.

History

General Nathanael Greene Homestead Major General Nathanael Greene Homestead

The house was built by Nathanael Greene in 1770, part of a property encompassing 2,000 acres (810 ha), and served as his family's home through the Revolutionary War. In 1783 Greene moved the family to Newport, before eventually relocating to Georgia, where he died in 1786. This house he sold to his brother Jacob. It remained in Greene family hands until 1899, although it became run-down and was used as a tenement house in the later years. In 1919 the Nathanael Greene Homestead Association was formed to restore and care for the property. It is now a house museum, open to the public.

General Nathanael Greene Homestead Nathanael Greene39s Rhode Island Homestead The History Girl

It was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1972, and was included in the Anthony Village Historic District in 2010.

References

General Nathanael Greene Homestead Wikipedia


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