Photo, Print, Drawing Green Hill, Slave Quarters, 378 Pannills Road (State Route 728), Long Island, Campbell County, VA Green Hill, Slave House Colonial Williamsburg Agricultural Buildings Project
More Resources
About this Item
Title
- Green Hill, Slave Quarters, 378 Pannills Road (State Route 728), Long Island, Campbell County, VA
Other Title
- Green Hill, Slave House Colonial Williamsburg Agricultural Buildings Project
Names
- Historic American Buildings Survey, creator
- Pannill, Samuel
- Carroll, Orville W., historian
- Boucher, Jack E., photographer
- Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, sponsor
- Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, Architectural Research Department, sponsor
- Grainger Department of Architectural Preservation and Research, sponsor
- Arzola, Robert R., project manager
- Klee, Jeffrey E., program coordinator
- Lavoie, Catherine C., editor
- Bergengren, Charles L., field team
- Chappell, Edward A., field team
- Taylor, Douglas R., field team
- Chappell, Edward A., historian
- Richter, Julie, historian
- McPartland, Mary, transmitter
Created / Published
- Documentation compiled after 1933
Headings
- - slave quarters
- - chicken houses
- - slavery
- - domestic life
- - wood structural frames
- - stone chimneys
- - gable roofs
- - plantations
- - lofts
- - wooden buildings
- - stone foundations
- - outbuildings
- - country life
- - slave quarters
- - Virginia--Campbell County--Long Island
Latitude / Longitude
- 37.061631,-79.071642
Notes
- - Significance: At the far end of the domestic yard, separated by a hundred feet from the kitchen, is a frame slave house which is said to be one of perhaps half a dozen quarters once located in this area of the complex. The only other visible site is marked by a lean-to chimney exactly paralleling the surviving chimney of a lost 19th-century lean-to behind this house. Like other buildings remaining at Green Hill, the slave house represents a relatively high level of accommodation and detail for its function. Initially it contained a room with finished walls and ultimately it consisted of three rooms, the rear room possibly being a kitchen. The fact that at most two such houses are actually known to have existed there, and the presence of at least several black craftsmen on Samuel Pannill's property in 1859 enhance the probability that this represents housing far superior to that occupied by most of Pannill's slaves.
- - Survey number: HABS VA-607
- - Building/structure dates: ca. 1800 Initial Construction
- - National Register of Historic Places NRIS Number: 69000226
Medium
- Photo(s): 1
- Measured Drawing(s): 2
- Data Page(s): 9
Call Number/Physical Location
- HABS VA,16-LONI.V,1K-
Source Collection
- Historic American Buildings Survey (Library of Congress)
Repository
- Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print
Control Number
- va0281
Rights Advisory
- No known restrictions on images made by the U.S. Government; images copied from other sources may be restricted. https://www.loc.gov/rr/print/res/114_habs.html
Online Format
- image
Part of
Format
Contributor
- Arzola, Robert R.
- Bergengren, Charles L.
- Boucher, Jack E.
- Carroll, Orville W.
- Chappell, Edward A.
- Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
- Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, Architectural Research Department
- Grainger Department of Architectural Preservation and Research
- Historic American Buildings Survey
- Klee, Jeffrey E.
- Lavoie, Catherine C.
- McPartland, Mary
- Pannill, Samuel
- Richter, Julie
- Taylor, Douglas R.