Francis Land House
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Virginia Historic Landmark
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Francis Land House
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Location: | 3131 Virginia Beach Blvd. Virginia Beach, Virginia |
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Built: | 1804 |
Architect: | Land, Francis |
Architectural style: | Georgian |
Governing body: | Local |
NRHP Reference#: | 75002118 |
Significant dates | |
Added to NRHP: | May 12, 1975[3] |
Designated VHL: | April 15, 1975[1][2] |
The Francis Land House, or Rose Hall,[4] is a brick house in located within the neighborhood of Thalia in Virginia Beach, Virginia. It was the plantation home of a prominent founding family of Princess Anne County, Virginia.[5][6] Land family history on the site spanned the 1630s to the 1850s.[5] The house passed through six males named Francis Land and then the last Francis' daughters before being sold to another family. Slaves were first documented on the site in 1694, with importation of new slaves up to the 1730s.[5] In the mid-18th century the plantation had as many as 20 slaves.[5] The first Francis Land arrived in the area in 1638–1639 and later acquired 1,020 acres (410 ha) of land by 1654, 200 of which was acquired via head rights by bringing four people with him. The plantation got as small as 350 acres (140 ha) over the next 150 years and at the time the current house was built the plantation was just under 700 acres (280 ha). The current house sits on 7 acres (2.8 ha) of that original plantation,[4][7][8] and is now in the midst of a very commercialized area.[5][7] The house was at one time thought to have been built in 1732,[7] but recent research has placed its construction in the period 1805–1810 by Francis Land VI.[6][9] Francis VI and his family lived there around 1805–1819, when Francis VI died.[6] When Francis Moseley Land built the house his family had already been living on that land for 150 years.[9] Francis VI and his wife had two daughters, who held onto the land until about 1850–1851, when it was first sold outside their family. The roof was raised 12 inches (300 mm) in 1912. The continued functioning as various types of farms until the 1940s, at which time it was a dairy farm. By the 1950s the area began to have businesses and a major road. During the mid-late 20th century the house functioned as the Rose Hall Dress Shop.[6] In the early-mid 1970s a developer wanted to tear down the house and build a shopping mall, but the City of Virginia Beach stepped in purchased the house and land in 1975; subsequently operating it as a historic house museum since 1986.[6] Special programs for schools, Scouts, and the general public are offered throughout the year.[10] Adjacent to the house are the Rose Hall Apartments and Rose Hall Professional Center.[8]
The house's exterior is Georgian style and the inside features period rooms furnished with Federal style antiques and reproductions with heart of pine floors.[6][7] The exterior walls are double depth Flemish bond brickwork. The manicured grounds include herb, vegetable, flax, formal, and "pleasure" gardens, as well as a history park which includes a constructed .1 miles (0.16 km) nature trail in a wooded wetland with interpretive sign exhibit.[5][7][8][9] The trail leads to what was once the Pine Tree Branch of the Lynnhaven River. There is a spinning wheel demonstration that shows how the family made clothing from its sheep. A Midsummer Celebration based on a medieval theme has been held annually during the summer solstice for over 20 years.[11]
The house was listed in the Virginia Landmarks Register (Virginia Historic Landmark) and the US National Register of Historic Places in 1975.[3][1][2] While the house has a plaque stating it was placed on the National Register of Historic Landmarks in 1975,[12] it does not appear on the official National Park Service listing of National Historic Landmarks (NHL) for Virginia.[13] If not already listed on the National Register of Historic Places, an NHL is automatically added to the Register upon designation. About three percent of Register listings are NHLs.[14]
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