Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Squire Cheyney Farm

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NRHP Reference #
  
09001214

Added to NRHP
  
11 January 2010

Area
  
18 ha

Squire Cheyney Farm

Location
  
1255 Cheyney Thornton Rd., Thornbury Township, Pennsylvania

Built
  
1797, c. 1804, c. 1815, c. 1830, c. 1850

Architectural style
  
Other, 3 cell plan, PA barn

Squire Cheyney Farm is a historic farm and national historic district located in Thornbury Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania. The district encompasses two contributing buildings, three contributing sites, one contributing structure, and contributing object. They are the farmhouse, barn (c. 1804, c. 1820, c. 1875, 1881, and c. 1910), ruins of a granary, remains of an ice house, a spring house (1799), stone retaining wall, and family cemetery (established c. 1803). The house was built in four periods, with the oldest dated to about 1797. The oldest section is a 2 1/s-story, three bay, stuccoed stone structure with a gable roof. The additions were built about 1815, about 1830, and about 1850, making it a seven bay wide dwelling. It is "L"-shaped and has a slate gable roof. During the American Revolution, Thomas "Squire" Cheyney [II] informed General George Washington during the Battle of Brandywine that the British were flanking him to the north. He was later appointed to the Pennsylvania Ratifying Convention to ratify the United States Constitution. The site is now a township park known as Squire Cheyney Farm Park.

It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2010.

References

Squire Cheyney Farm Wikipedia