ME ME ME ME ME ME!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I had no idea! Anyone want to go in halvsies?
No kidding!Can't beat that estimated monthly payment.
At the least a total gut job.the house looks like a tear-down to me
Did you look at the pics?At the least a total gut job.
I did and it needs a lot of work. I actually worked that farm 30 years ago. Never went inside the house but did get some history of it from the owner. 30 years ago it was a run down place. It looks a little better now but not a lot Based on the pics. I’ve worked too many farms in this county with old houses like this to know that I never want to own one - the maintenance alone will put you in the poor house - worse than owning a boat!Did you look at the pics?
I'll bet it's already in preservation.Just think of how much workforce housing you could build on that acreage.
I doubt that the people in the potential buyer pool for it will be financing.
OK... I went through the pictures and didn't see one damn mulberry.
WTF???
I did and it needs a lot of work. I actually worked that farm 30 years ago. Never went inside the house but did get some history of it from the owner. 30 years ago it was a run down place. It looks a little better now but not a lot Based on the pics. I’ve worked too many farms in this county with old houses like this to know that I never want to own one - the maintenance alone will put you in the poor house - worse than owning a boat!
Explains the many Somerville's of black descent in the county.How long before we hear: This property should be turned over to the antecedents of the slaves that built it and labored in the fields! The property is a monument to the suppression, maltreatment and exploitation of blacks in America. As obama said "You didn't build that".
Shortly before his [William Somerville's] death, he increased his slave labor force from 46 to 180 men, women, and children by 1806. An old brick Quarters (perhaps the one that oldtimers remember as dated "1760" on the gable) could not accomodate all, and frame quarters had to be built to house the newcomers. Most, of course, worked in the fields, cultivating mainly corn, wheat, flax, and cotton (Somerville owned an early patent cotton gin). Cooks, stable hands, waiters and housekeepers gave the mansion and the thicket of outbuildings around it the appearance of a busy village. A nearly matched pair of service buildings a kitchen and "workhouse"- still flank the dwelling on its backside [north] its business end. (The unrestored workhouse preserves a rare interior clapboard wall.) A dairy, a meathouse, two carriage houses, and a long granary that once stood nearby have disappeared.
Yep, many slaves took the masters surname. Notice there are few white Washingtons.....Explains the many Somerville's of black descent in the county.
Friends of mine owned a golf course in PG with an old mansion on it. They sold the course but kept a sliver of land that had their houses and the mansion. They had grown up in that house and ended up getting it in the 'historical' preservation thingie. The house needed work and when they looked into it, they decided they didn't want to spend the money. They offered it to the developer for 1mil, he took it....then they turned him(developer) into the historical cult for not maintaining it....I never want to own one - the maintenance alone will put you in the poor house - worse than owning a boat!
Guy I worked with had a slate roof on his house in Fredricksburg, cost him 40k back in the early 2000s to have it re-done.Unless I'm missing my guess, the slate roof on the main house alone is a 30-50k job. And it needs it badly.