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Coordinates: 37°11′23″N 80°34′35″W / 37.18972°N 80.57639°W / 37.18972; -80.57639
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{{short description|Archaeological site in Virginia, United States}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2023}}

{{Infobox NRHP
{{Infobox NRHP
| name = Kentland Farm Historic and Archeological District
| name = Kentland Farm Historic and Archeological District
| nrhp_type = hd
| nrhp_type = hd
| nocat = yes
| designated_other1 = Virginia Landmarks Register
| designated_other1 = Virginia Landmarks Register
| designated_other1_date =April 17, 1991, June 8, 2006<ref name=register>{{cite web|title=Virginia Landmarks Register|url=http://www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/register_counties_cities.htm|publisher=Virginia Department of Historic Resources|accessdate=5 June 2013}}</ref>
| designated_other1_date = April 17, 1991, June 8, 2006<ref name=register>{{cite web|title=Virginia Landmarks Register|url=http://www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/register_counties_cities.htm|publisher=Virginia Department of Historic Resources|accessdate=5 June 2013}}</ref>
| designated_other1_number = 060-0202
| designated_other1_number = 060-0202
| designated_other1_num_position = bottom
| designated_other1_num_position = bottom
| image = Kentland Farm.jpg
| caption = Kentland Farm, September 2012
| image = Kentland Farm.jpg
| caption = Kentland Farm, September 2012
| location=At end of VA 623 along New River, near [[Blacksburg, Virginia]]
| location = At end of VA 623 along New River, near [[Blacksburg, Virginia]]
| lat_degrees = 37
| coordinates = {{coord|37|11|23|N|80|34|35|W|display=inline,title}}
| lat_minutes = 11
| locmapin = Virginia#USA
| lat_seconds = 23
| built = {{Start date|1745}}, 1834-1835
| lat_direction = N
| builder = Swope, John
| long_degrees = 80
| architecture = Greek Revival, Federal
| long_minutes = 34
| added = July 3, 1991, September 6, 2006 (Boundary Increase)
| long_seconds = 35
| area = {{convert|350|acre}}
| long_direction = W
| mpsub = {{NRHP url|id=64500684|title=Montgomery County MPS}}
| coord_display = inline,title
| refnum = 91000833, 06000801<ref name="nris">{{NRISref|version=2010a}}</ref>
| locmapin = Virginia
| built = {{Start date|1745}}, 1834-1835
| builder = Swope, John
| architecture = Greek Revival, Federal
| added = July 3, 1991, September 6, 2006 (Boundary Increase)
| area = {{convert|350|acre}}
| governing_body = State
| mpsub = [http://pdfhost.focus.nps.gov/docs/NRHP/Text/64500684.pdf Montgomery County MPS]
| refnum = 91000833, 06000801<ref name="nris">{{NRISref|version=2010a}}</ref>
}}
}}
'''Kentland Farm Historic and Archeological District''' is a historic home, [[archaeological site]], and national [[Historic district (United States)|historic district]] located near [[Blacksburg, Virginia|Blacksburg]], [[Montgomery County, Virginia]]. The district encompasses a complex of 19th century agricultural outbuildings associated with a [[Federal architecture|Federal]] and [[Greek Revival architecture|Greek Revival]] style brick dwelling built 1834–1835. Located in the district are significant archaeological resources that include a complex of Late Woodland village or camp sites.<ref name="vtlib">{{cite web |url=http://spec.lib.vt.edu/kentland/kentsurvey.pdf|title=ARCHAEOLOGICAL SURVEY AND LIMITED EVALUATION, KENTLAND FARM HISTORIC AND ARCHAEOLOGICAL DISTRICT (060-0202), MONTGOMERY COUNTY, VIRGINIA |author=William and Mary Center for Archaeological Research| date=2005|publisher=Virginia Tech Libraries}}</ref>
'''Kentland Farm Historic and Archeological District''' is a historic home, [[archaeological site]], and national [[Historic district (United States)|historic district]] located near [[Blacksburg, Virginia|Blacksburg]], [[Montgomery County, Virginia]]. The district encompasses a complex of 19th century agricultural outbuildings associated with a [[Federal architecture|Federal]] and [[Greek Revival architecture|Greek Revival]] style brick dwelling built 1834–1835. Located in the district are significant archaeological resources that include a complex of Late Woodland village or camp sites.<ref name="vtlib">{{cite web |url=http://spec.lib.vt.edu/kentland/kentsurvey.pdf|title=ARCHAEOLOGICAL SURVEY AND LIMITED EVALUATION, KENTLAND FARM HISTORIC AND ARCHAEOLOGICAL DISTRICT (060-0202), MONTGOMERY COUNTY, VIRGINIA |author=William and Mary Center for Archaeological Research| date=2005|publisher=Virginia Tech Libraries}}</ref><ref>Moore, William H., and Joe B. Jones. [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/758997910 Archaeological Survey and Limited Evaluation, Kentland Farm Historic and Archaeological District (060-0202), Montgomery County, Virginia]. Williamsburg, Va: William and Mary Center for Archaeological Research, 2005.</ref>


==Native American Occupation==
There is archeological evidence of a [[Late Woodland Period]] occupation on the site. "An archeological survey, conducted in 1991, confirmed that there is at least one extensive Late Woodland Period (AD 800-1600) prehistoric Indian village located on the farm. The investigation resulted in the recovery of hundreds of artifacts including weapons, stone tools and lithic debris from tool manufacture, fragments of aboriginal clay pottery, fire-cracked rocks from hearths or fireplaces, and other pieces. There is also evidence of Native American Shawnee habitation and migration in the late 1700s through Kentland Farm, [[Toms Creek, Virginia]], and the [[New River (Kanawha River)]]."<ref name="Kentland">[http://www.vaes.vt.edu/college-farm/kentland/index.html "Kentland"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160729031638/http://www.vaes.vt.edu/college-farm/kentland/index.html |date=2016-07-29 }}.</ref>

==Kent Family==
James Randal Kent<ref>Kern, John. 1996. "Kentland Farm, a New River Plantation". Journal of the Roanoke Valley Historical Society. 13, no. 2: 45-52. Abstract: Owners and/or occupants of Kentland Farm include John Buchanan, Abram Trigg, Gordon Cloyd, Thomas Cloyd, David Cloyd, James Randall Kent, Mary Cloyd Kent, Margaret Kent Cowan, John T. Cowan, James Randal Kent Cowan, Maude Battle Cowan, Francis Bell, and Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. Short biographical sketches are included.
Kentland Farm was previously known as Buchanan's Bottom, The property also included Cowans Mill.</ref> acquired the farm in the early 1800s. According to the U.S. Census just prior to the Civil War, Kent produced corn, wheat, wool, butter, hay, clover seed, oats, flax seed, plus horses, cattle, sheep and swine, and owned 123 slaves. His property holdings were twice as valuable as the next wealthiest landowner in Montgomery County.<ref name="Kentland"/>

James Kent also owned the largest number of slaves in the region. Before the Civil War, along with his daughter who owned another farm across the river, that is now the site of the [[Radford Arsenal]], they owned 250 slaves in 1860.<ref name="Cook, Samuel R 2015. Page 71">Cook, Samuel R. and Thomas Klatka. 2015. "Verifying a Slave Community at Kentland." Historical Society of Western Virginia. Journal. Volume XXII (1), 2016. Page 71.</ref>

===Farm Buildings===
The site today still maintains several buildings from the Kent family farm period. This includes the antebellum brick manor house, and other buildings including a mill, numerous early farm buildings, garden areas, an antebellum cemetery for the Kent family and for the slave community.<ref name="Cook, Samuel R 2015. Page 71"/>

Many of the farm buildings "were constructed in the 1950s and have been retrofitted over and over again. Some have been abandoned, like two old concrete block silos that still stand on the site." Other buildings are more recently constructed, from the 1980s to the present.<ref name="roanoke.com">Moxley, Tonia. 2015. [http://www.roanoke.com/news/education/higher_education/virginia_tech/new-virginia-tech-dairy-science-facilities-under-construction-at-kentland/article_9dfd2287-bcab-5e47-b4a3-dc6b74c90e9e.html?_dc=719117846019.1512 "New Virginia Tech dairy science facilities under construction at Kentland Farm"]. Roanoke Times. April 1, 2015.</ref> Some of the old barns held unexpected finds, such as an old apple cider press and early chain saws, now refurbished and used by the students.<ref>Katherine Fairbanks. 2013. [https://farmsandfields.wordpress.com/tag/kentland-farm/ "Fall Fun Day Recap".] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161013173633/https://farmsandfields.wordpress.com/tag/kentland-farm/ |date=2016-10-13 }} November 5, 2013.</ref>

The house is considered modest today, but was built of brick to keep it cool during the summers. German stonemasons mined limestone from Brush Mountain, while slaves mined clay from nearby pits and made the bricks for the home and the six-sided smokehouse. "Other, long forgotten artisans worked on the house's interior, including a perfectly preserved and ornately carved wooden handrail on the main staircase."<ref>Moxley, Tonia. 2015. [http://www.roanoke.com/news/local/blacksburg/historic-kentland-manor-still-weathering-the-ages/article_d3d50c50-d9dc-5d09-81a1-669a0920f831.html "Historic Kentland manor still weathering the ages"]. Roanoke Times. June 28, 2015.</ref>

The manor house was built in 1834-35<ref>Pezzoni, J. Daniel. 1996. [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/857035285 "The Architecture of Kentland"]. Journal of the Roanoke Valley Historical Society. 13, no. 2: 53-58.</ref> as a two-story, five-bay, Flemish bond brick I house, extended two story ell, stone foundation, metal-sheathed gable roof, Federal and Greek revival interior and exterior detailing, and adjacent cistern, two-story kitchen, and hexagonal brick meat house (Patricia Givens Johnson, 1995<ref>Johnson, Patricia Givens. [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/31740530 Kentland at Whitethorne: Virginia Tech's Agricultural Farm and Families That Owned It, Harmans, Buchanans, Triggs, Cloyds, Kents, Cowans, Bells, Adams]. Blacksburg, Va: Walpa Pub, 1995.</ref>).<ref name="Kentland"/>

==Virginia Tech==
[[Virginia Tech]] acquired the 1,785 acre Kentland Farm in a controversial land swap on December 31, 1986. The acquisition expanded the college farm to over 3,000 acres. The farm was purchased for the support of teaching, research, and extension programs in the [[Virginia Tech College of Agriculture and Life Sciences]].<ref name="Kentland"/>

There has been some discussion about the preservation and demonstration of African American habitation on the site. This includes the location and preservation of slave cemeteries, cabins and other evidence of their use of the land.<ref>Cook, Samuel R., and Thomas S. Klatka. 2015. [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/932247285 "The Nexus of Collaboration: Negotiating African American History and Public Interest in Southwest Virginia"]. Anthropology Now. 7, no. 2: 26-36.</ref><ref>Klatka, Thomas S., Donna Dunay, Jessica Wirgau, Z. Scott Hurst, and Scott Gardner. [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/700943307 The 2006 Historic Lecture Series]. Blacksburg, VA: WTOB Blacksburg, 2006. Disc 1. Collective efforts to document the slave cemetery at Kentland Plantation / Tom Klatka (39 min.).</ref><ref name="Cook, Samuel R 2015. Page 71"/>

in 2015, construction began on Virginia Tech's $14 million dairy center on Kentland Farm. Subsequently, Virginia Tech's 500-head dairy herd and production facility was relocated to the farm.<ref name="roanoke.com"/> Other projects at the time included improving soil characteristics on the farm.<ref>[http://static1.squarespace.com/enwiki/static/52ec31b2e4b04eb0bbd9c075/t/533b1b1be4b04f19c3e454fe/1396382491839/Va+Tech+urban+soil+restoration.pdf "Soil Rehabilitation Experiment Site (SRES) at Kentland Farm"].</ref>

==National Register of Historic Places==
It was listed on the [[National Register of Historic Places]] in 1991, with a boundary increase in 2006.<ref name=nris/>
It was listed on the [[National Register of Historic Places]] in 1991, with a boundary increase in 2006.<ref name=nris/>


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{{National Register of Historic Places in Virginia}}
{{National Register of Historic Places in Virginia}}


[[Category:Buildings and structures on the National Register of Historic Places in Virginia]]
[[Category:Farms on the National Register of Historic Places in Virginia]]
[[Category:Archaeological sites on the National Register of Historic Places in Virginia]]
[[Category:Archaeological sites on the National Register of Historic Places in Virginia]]
[[Category:Historic districts in Virginia]]
[[Category:Historic districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Virginia]]
[[Category:Federal architecture in Virginia]]
[[Category:Federal architecture in Virginia]]
[[Category:Greek Revival houses in Virginia]]
[[Category:Greek Revival houses in Virginia]]
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[[Category:National Register of Historic Places in Montgomery County, Virginia]]
[[Category:National Register of Historic Places in Montgomery County, Virginia]]
[[Category:Buildings and structures in Blacksburg, Virginia]]
[[Category:Buildings and structures in Blacksburg, Virginia]]
[[Category:Plantation houses in Virginia]]

{{MontgomeryCountyVA-NRHP-stub}}

Latest revision as of 21:57, 7 August 2023

Kentland Farm Historic and Archeological District
Kentland Farm, September 2012
Kentland Farm Historic and Archeological District is located in Virginia
Kentland Farm Historic and Archeological District
Kentland Farm Historic and Archeological District is located in the United States
Kentland Farm Historic and Archeological District
LocationAt end of VA 623 along New River, near Blacksburg, Virginia
Coordinates37°11′23″N 80°34′35″W / 37.18972°N 80.57639°W / 37.18972; -80.57639
Area350 acres (140 ha)
Built1745 (1745), 1834-1835
Built bySwope, John
Architectural styleGreek Revival, Federal
MPSMontgomery County MPS
NRHP reference No.91000833, 06000801[1]
VLR No.060-0202
Significant dates
Added to NRHPJuly 3, 1991, September 6, 2006 (Boundary Increase)
Designated VLRApril 17, 1991, June 8, 2006[2]

Kentland Farm Historic and Archeological District is a historic home, archaeological site, and national historic district located near Blacksburg, Montgomery County, Virginia. The district encompasses a complex of 19th century agricultural outbuildings associated with a Federal and Greek Revival style brick dwelling built 1834–1835. Located in the district are significant archaeological resources that include a complex of Late Woodland village or camp sites.[3][4]

Native American Occupation

[edit]

There is archeological evidence of a Late Woodland Period occupation on the site. "An archeological survey, conducted in 1991, confirmed that there is at least one extensive Late Woodland Period (AD 800-1600) prehistoric Indian village located on the farm. The investigation resulted in the recovery of hundreds of artifacts including weapons, stone tools and lithic debris from tool manufacture, fragments of aboriginal clay pottery, fire-cracked rocks from hearths or fireplaces, and other pieces. There is also evidence of Native American Shawnee habitation and migration in the late 1700s through Kentland Farm, Toms Creek, Virginia, and the New River (Kanawha River)."[5]

Kent Family

[edit]

James Randal Kent[6] acquired the farm in the early 1800s. According to the U.S. Census just prior to the Civil War, Kent produced corn, wheat, wool, butter, hay, clover seed, oats, flax seed, plus horses, cattle, sheep and swine, and owned 123 slaves. His property holdings were twice as valuable as the next wealthiest landowner in Montgomery County.[5]

James Kent also owned the largest number of slaves in the region. Before the Civil War, along with his daughter who owned another farm across the river, that is now the site of the Radford Arsenal, they owned 250 slaves in 1860.[7]

Farm Buildings

[edit]

The site today still maintains several buildings from the Kent family farm period. This includes the antebellum brick manor house, and other buildings including a mill, numerous early farm buildings, garden areas, an antebellum cemetery for the Kent family and for the slave community.[7]

Many of the farm buildings "were constructed in the 1950s and have been retrofitted over and over again. Some have been abandoned, like two old concrete block silos that still stand on the site." Other buildings are more recently constructed, from the 1980s to the present.[8] Some of the old barns held unexpected finds, such as an old apple cider press and early chain saws, now refurbished and used by the students.[9]

The house is considered modest today, but was built of brick to keep it cool during the summers. German stonemasons mined limestone from Brush Mountain, while slaves mined clay from nearby pits and made the bricks for the home and the six-sided smokehouse. "Other, long forgotten artisans worked on the house's interior, including a perfectly preserved and ornately carved wooden handrail on the main staircase."[10]

The manor house was built in 1834-35[11] as a two-story, five-bay, Flemish bond brick I house, extended two story ell, stone foundation, metal-sheathed gable roof, Federal and Greek revival interior and exterior detailing, and adjacent cistern, two-story kitchen, and hexagonal brick meat house (Patricia Givens Johnson, 1995[12]).[5]

Virginia Tech

[edit]

Virginia Tech acquired the 1,785 acre Kentland Farm in a controversial land swap on December 31, 1986. The acquisition expanded the college farm to over 3,000 acres. The farm was purchased for the support of teaching, research, and extension programs in the Virginia Tech College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.[5]

There has been some discussion about the preservation and demonstration of African American habitation on the site. This includes the location and preservation of slave cemeteries, cabins and other evidence of their use of the land.[13][14][7]

in 2015, construction began on Virginia Tech's $14 million dairy center on Kentland Farm. Subsequently, Virginia Tech's 500-head dairy herd and production facility was relocated to the farm.[8] Other projects at the time included improving soil characteristics on the farm.[15]

National Register of Historic Places

[edit]

It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1991, with a boundary increase in 2006.[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  2. ^ "Virginia Landmarks Register". Virginia Department of Historic Resources. Retrieved June 5, 2013.
  3. ^ William and Mary Center for Archaeological Research (2005). "ARCHAEOLOGICAL SURVEY AND LIMITED EVALUATION, KENTLAND FARM HISTORIC AND ARCHAEOLOGICAL DISTRICT (060-0202), MONTGOMERY COUNTY, VIRGINIA" (PDF). Virginia Tech Libraries.
  4. ^ Moore, William H., and Joe B. Jones. Archaeological Survey and Limited Evaluation, Kentland Farm Historic and Archaeological District (060-0202), Montgomery County, Virginia. Williamsburg, Va: William and Mary Center for Archaeological Research, 2005.
  5. ^ a b c d "Kentland" Archived 2016-07-29 at the Wayback Machine.
  6. ^ Kern, John. 1996. "Kentland Farm, a New River Plantation". Journal of the Roanoke Valley Historical Society. 13, no. 2: 45-52. Abstract: Owners and/or occupants of Kentland Farm include John Buchanan, Abram Trigg, Gordon Cloyd, Thomas Cloyd, David Cloyd, James Randall Kent, Mary Cloyd Kent, Margaret Kent Cowan, John T. Cowan, James Randal Kent Cowan, Maude Battle Cowan, Francis Bell, and Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. Short biographical sketches are included. Kentland Farm was previously known as Buchanan's Bottom, The property also included Cowans Mill.
  7. ^ a b c Cook, Samuel R. and Thomas Klatka. 2015. "Verifying a Slave Community at Kentland." Historical Society of Western Virginia. Journal. Volume XXII (1), 2016. Page 71.
  8. ^ a b Moxley, Tonia. 2015. "New Virginia Tech dairy science facilities under construction at Kentland Farm". Roanoke Times. April 1, 2015.
  9. ^ Katherine Fairbanks. 2013. "Fall Fun Day Recap". Archived 2016-10-13 at the Wayback Machine November 5, 2013.
  10. ^ Moxley, Tonia. 2015. "Historic Kentland manor still weathering the ages". Roanoke Times. June 28, 2015.
  11. ^ Pezzoni, J. Daniel. 1996. "The Architecture of Kentland". Journal of the Roanoke Valley Historical Society. 13, no. 2: 53-58.
  12. ^ Johnson, Patricia Givens. Kentland at Whitethorne: Virginia Tech's Agricultural Farm and Families That Owned It, Harmans, Buchanans, Triggs, Cloyds, Kents, Cowans, Bells, Adams. Blacksburg, Va: Walpa Pub, 1995.
  13. ^ Cook, Samuel R., and Thomas S. Klatka. 2015. "The Nexus of Collaboration: Negotiating African American History and Public Interest in Southwest Virginia". Anthropology Now. 7, no. 2: 26-36.
  14. ^ Klatka, Thomas S., Donna Dunay, Jessica Wirgau, Z. Scott Hurst, and Scott Gardner. The 2006 Historic Lecture Series. Blacksburg, VA: WTOB Blacksburg, 2006. Disc 1. Collective efforts to document the slave cemetery at Kentland Plantation / Tom Klatka (39 min.).
  15. ^ "Soil Rehabilitation Experiment Site (SRES) at Kentland Farm".