Vance Birthplace
The site is located in the Reems Creek Valley, and was originally a mountain plantation that was owned by David Vance II and Mira Margaret Baird Vance. The historic site explores daily life in the early 1800s in the Blue Ridge Mountains. Visitors can see the historic structures, including a loom house, tool shed, spring house, smoke house, and corn crib. Guided tours show visitors a 1790 slave house and discuss the eighteen enslaved people that lived and worked on the Vance farm. Tours conclude at the reconstructed 1790s Vance home.
Zebulon Baird Vance was born on the property in 1830, and went on to be Governor of North Carolina (1877–1879) and U.S. Senator (1879–1894).
The farm features an exhibit about Vance's career, and how this early mountain life influenced him.
References
- ^ Tate, David (2006). "Zebulon B. Vance Birthplace". NCPEDIA.
- Johnston, Frontis W. (1953). Zebulon B. Vance: A Personality Sketch., NCHR 30
- Knapp, Richard F., ed. (1995). North Carolina's State Historic Sites: A Brief History and Status Report.
- Yates, Richard E. (1958). The Confederacy and Zeb Vance.
- "Vance Birthplace, North Carolina Historic Sites". Retrieved August 28, 2012.
- Travel and Promotion Division, Department of Conservation and Development. "Sheltering a heritage: North Carolina's historic buildings." Raleigh, N. C." Litho Industries, Inc. 1969. http://digital.ncdcr.gov/u?/p249901coll22,642128 (accessed August 28, 2012).
- "Zebulon B Vance Birthplace, Official website".