Bausman Farmstead | |
Location | 1630 and 1631 Millersville Pike, Lancaster Township, Pennsylvania |
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Coordinates | 40°1′17″N76°20′1″W / 40.02139°N 76.33361°W |
Area | 6 acres (2.4 ha) |
Built | 1775, 1836, 1879 |
Architectural style | Federal, Late Victorian, Pennsylvania barn |
MPS | Historic Farming Resources of Lancaster County MPS |
NRHP reference No. | 94001061 [1] |
Added to NRHP | August 30, 1994 |
Bausman Farmstead is a historic home and farm located at Lancaster Township, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania.
The complex includes a brick dwelling with summer kitchen, bank barn, stone still house, and Bausman Mansion. The brick farmhouse is a 1 1/2-story, four bay wide brick dwelling with a 2-story rear ell built in 1836. The summer kitchen is attached to the west of the rear wing and attached by a brick infill section. The brick bank barn was built in 1869. The stone still house is dated to 1775. The Bausman Mansion was built in 1879, and is a 2 1/2-story, brick dwelling in the Late Victorian style. [2]
It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1994. [1]
In 2020 property was bought by Russia Insider editor Charles Bausman, whose ancestors owned the farmstead. [3]
Nicodemus Mill Complex is a historic home and mill complex located at Keedysville, Washington County, Maryland, United States. It consists of a dated 1810 2+1⁄2-story, five-bay stone house with a mid-19th-century brick service wing, the ruins of a grist mill built about 1829, and an extensive complement of 19th-century domestic and agricultural outbuildings including a stone springhouse, stone-end bank barn, brick out kitchen, frame wash house, and a stuccoed stone secondary dwelling. It is an intact representative example of the type of farmstead characteristic of the region during the 19th century.
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David Davis Farm, also known as the Christian Summers Farm and John Martin Farm, is a historic farm and national historic district located at Earl Township, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. The district includes seven contributing buildings and one contributing site. They include the farmhouse, a stone bank barn, spring house, two frame tobacco barns, a small frame shed, and family burial ground. The farmhouse is an evolutionary dwelling originally built as a two-story, stone building about 1750, and extensively remodeled in 1787. Stone and frame additions were made about 1815, about 1870, and about 1890. Attached to the house is a small frame summer kitchen with beehive oven, that was once a separate structure.
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