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<!--Generated by Squarespace Site Server v5.9.1 (http://www.squarespace.com/) on Tue, 09 Feb 2010 14:17:54 GMT--><feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"><title>Backcountry History</title><subtitle>Backcountry History</subtitle><id>http://www.backcountrynotes.com/history/</id><link rel="alternate" type="application/xhtml+xml" href="http://www.backcountrynotes.com/history/"/><link rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.backcountrynotes.com/history/atom.xml"/><updated>2010-02-06T20:07:05Z</updated><generator uri="http://www.squarespace.com/" version="Squarespace Site Server v5.9.1 (http://www.squarespace.com/)">Squarespace</generator><entry><title>The Late, Great State of Franklin</title><category term="Back Country"/><category term="Franklin"/><category term="Great Wagon Road"/><category term="Sevier"/><category term="State of Franklin"/><category term="Tennessee"/><category term="Tennessee"/><category term="early settlers America"/><id>http://www.backcountrynotes.com/history/2010/2/6/the-late-great-state-of-franklin.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.backcountrynotes.com/history/2010/2/6/the-late-great-state-of-franklin.html"/><author><name>Jay Henderson</name></author><published>2010-02-06T17:38:34Z</published><updated>2010-02-06T17:38:34Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p><span class="thumbnail-image-float-right ssNonEditable"><span><a href="javascript:showFullImage('/display/ShowImage?imageUrl=%2Fstorage%2Fpost-images%2F491853081_1f80ead0c2.jpg%3F__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION%3D1265478467445',375,500);"><img src="http://www.backcountrynotes.com/storage/thumbnails/2108889-5652811-thumbnail.jpg?__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION=1265478505485" alt="" /></a></span><span class="thumbnail-caption" style="width: 202px;">Replica of log cabin which served as the capitol of the State of Franklin.  Click on image for larger view. Image source: http://www.flickr.com/photos/auvet/491853081/</span></span>In many ways the Backcountry settlers in what is now eastern Tennessee had always been a breed apart from the North Carolinians who, technically, controlled that land in colonial and early American times.&nbsp; Northeast Tennessee was settled primarily by Scotch-Irish and other like-minded migrants coming through the Valley of Virginia by way of the Great Wagon Road. North Carolina awarded bounty lands to its Revolutionary War veterans in the area of Middle Tennessee, encouraging migration by way of the Wilderness Road through Kentucky.&nbsp; For many years, the settlements of East and Middle Tennessee were separate ventures.</p>
<p><span class="thumbnail-image-float-left ssNonEditable"><span><a href="javascript:showFullImage('/display/ShowImage?imageUrl=%2Fstorage%2Fpost-images%2F781px-8FranklinCounties.png%3F__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION%3D1265479760831',600,781);"><img src="http://www.backcountrynotes.com/storage/thumbnails/2108889-5653051-thumbnail.jpg?__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION=1265479798486" alt="" /></a></span><span class="thumbnail-caption" style="width: 202px;">Click on image for larger view.  For image source and licensing information, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:8FranklinCounties.png</span></span>Relations with Raleigh became increasingly strained after the Revolutionary War ended and North Carolina legislators adopted what was widely perceived as a self-serving "land grab" law. See <a class="offsite-link-inline" href="http://www.northcarolinahistory.org/encyclopedia/99/entry" target="_blank">North Carolina History Project, State of Franklin</a>.&nbsp; In 1784 the folk of northeast Tennessee decided to go their own way and form the State of Franklin.&nbsp; See <a class="offsite-link-inline" href="http://www.learnnc.org/lp/editions/nchist-newnation/5273" target="_blank">Learn NC, The State of Franklin</a>.&nbsp;</p>
<p>The Franklinites adopted a constitution and established a capitol at Greeneville, Tennessee. John Sevier, one of the leaders of the Overmountain Men militia which won the Battle of King's Mountain, was elected governor.&nbsp; Matters quickly spun out of control, a few shots were fired, and Sevier was arrested and forced to post bond.&nbsp; By 1789, the State of Franklin had passed into history.&nbsp; See <a class="offsite-link-inline" href="http://tennesseeencyclopedia.net/imagegallery.php?EntryID=F061" target="_blank">The Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture, State of Franklin</a>.&nbsp; John Sevier survived the fray and in 1796 was elected the first governor of the State of Tennessee.</p>
<p>For a much more detailed history of the Franklin secession, see <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Ramsey's Annals of Tennessee</span> (1853), <a class="offsite-link-inline" href="http://www.roanetnhistory.org/ramseysannals.php?loc=RamseysAnnals&amp;pgid=293" target="_blank">Chapter IV -- The State of Franklin</a>. See also <a href="http://www.backcountrynotes.com/history/2009/7/25/ramseys-map-of-cumberland-and-franklin.html">Ramsey's Map of Cumberland and Franklin</a>.</p>
<p>For many Northeast Tennesseans, the State of Franklin affair represented (and still symbolizes in some opinions) the apparently inevitable conflict between liberty and corrupt government.&nbsp; The State of Franklin certainly was in keeping with the character of the Backcountry settlers who had come to this rugged area to secure land and liberty and were determined to preserve their rights to both.</p>
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<p>&nbsp;</p>]]></content></entry><entry><title>The Daniel Coxe Map of 1727</title><category term="1727"/><category term="Back Country"/><category term="Backcountry colonial"/><category term="Colonial America"/><category term="Colonial Back Country"/><category term="Coxe"/><category term="Great Wagon Road"/><category term="maps"/><id>http://www.backcountrynotes.com/history/2010/1/3/the-daniel-coxe-map-of-1727.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.backcountrynotes.com/history/2010/1/3/the-daniel-coxe-map-of-1727.html"/><author><name>Jay Henderson</name></author><published>2010-01-04T02:43:02Z</published><updated>2010-01-04T02:43:02Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p><span class="thumbnail-image-float-left ssNonEditable"><span><a href="javascript:showFullImage('/display/ShowImage?imageUrl=%2Fstorage%2Fmaps%2FDanielCoxe_1727Map_large.jpg%3F__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION%3D1262573712531',1555,2000);"><img src="http://www.backcountrynotes.com/storage/thumbnails/2108889-5234722-thumbnail.jpg?__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION=1262573741232" alt="" /></a></span><span class="thumbnail-caption" style="width: 152px;">click on this image for a full-size view of the Daniel Coxe 1727 Map</span></span>The interesting personalities which pertain to the Colonial period of America include a royal physician, Dr. Daniel Coxe, and his son, Daniel Coxe, Jr., who were the original claimants to "Carolana" -- the Carolinas, and beyond.&nbsp; In 1722, a book titled <strong>"A description of the English province of Carolana, by the Spaniards call'd Florida, and by the French La Louisiane", </strong> was published under the name of Dr. Daniel Coxe along with a folding insert map.&nbsp; The author of the book -- which detailed travels throughout "Carolana" and Florida and other sections of North America -- was probably Daniel Coxe, Jr., as his father never traveled to the New World.</p>
<p><span class="thumbnail-image-float-right ssNonEditable"><span><a href="javascript:showFullImage('/display/ShowImage?imageUrl=%2Fstorage%2Fmaps%2FDanielCoxe_1727_InsetMap.jpg%3F__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION%3D1262573649022',820,820);"><img src="http://www.backcountrynotes.com/storage/thumbnails/2108889-5234716-thumbnail.jpg?__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION=1262573651237" alt="" /></a></span></span>Copies of the 1722 book and map are very rare, but there are several copies of the 1727 republications of both.&nbsp; A copy of the book is owned by the University of Miami Libraries, which provides <a class="offsite-link-inline" href="http://scholar.library.miami.edu/purdy/coxe.html" target="_blank">brief bios of the Coxes</a>, father and son. The map is available in digital form from several sources, including the <a class="offsite-link-inline" href="http://www2.vcdh.virginia.edu/lewisandclark/students/projects/adventurers/documents/coxemap_titlepage.htm" target="_blank">UVA Alderman Library</a>. Of interest to students of the Colonial Backcountry, the Daniel Coxe 1727 Map contains a clear depiction of the track of the Great Trading Path. This can be seen on the inset (click on the thumbnail to the right), although it is not named as such.&nbsp; The track begins below Lake Champlaign, courses through Pennsylvania to the Cumberland Valley, and then goes through the "Apalachean" Mountains before turning south through the Carolinas, eventually reaching the Atlantic coast at Charles Town.</p>
<p>What is lacking on the map is a depiction of the Great Philadelphia Wagon Road which, during this period, was pushing west from Philadelphia into the Cumberland Valley, where it linked up with the Great Trading Path.&nbsp; Eventually the Path was transformed into the Great Wagon Road.&nbsp; See <a href="http://www.backcountrynotes.com/history/2008/3/25/the-great-wagon-road-americas-original-interstate-highway.html">The Great Wagon Road -- America's Original Interstate Highway</a>.</p>]]></content></entry><entry><title>Tracing The Name of the "Appalachian" Mountains</title><category term="Appalachia"/><category term="Appalachia"/><category term="Back Country"/><category term="Colonial America"/><category term="maps"/><category term="maps"/><category term="names"/><id>http://www.backcountrynotes.com/history/2009/8/30/tracing-the-name-of-the-appalachian-mountains.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.backcountrynotes.com/history/2009/8/30/tracing-the-name-of-the-appalachian-mountains.html"/><author><name>Jay Henderson</name></author><published>2009-08-30T18:07:43Z</published><updated>2009-08-30T18:07:43Z</updated><summary type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: left;"><span class="full-image-float-right ssNonEditable"><span><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Gutierrez-1562-detail-app1.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.backcountrynotes.com/storage/maps/Gutierrez-1562-detail-app1.jpg?__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION=1239201554109" alt="" /></a></span></span>Europeans named the southern mountains after the Apalchen or Apalachen tribe of natives (see map detail at left). How did the name progress from "Apalchen" to "Appalachia?" It almost didn't; a competing name, "Allegheny," took the forefront in the late 18th century.&nbsp; ("Allegheny" is a native American term meaning, roughly, "fine river.") However, by the late 19th century, the geologists and geographers had adopted the name "Appalachian Mountains" to describe  the full range, with the name "Allegheny" being used for two sub-provinces, the Allegheny Mountains and the Allegheny Plateau.</p>]]></summary></entry><entry><title>Frontier Culture Museum 1850 American Farm</title><category term="1850"/><category term="Back Country"/><category term="Frontier Culture Museum"/><category term="Shenandoah Valley"/><category term="early settlers America"/><category term="farm"/><category term="log cabins"/><category term="log houses"/><category term="museum"/><id>http://www.backcountrynotes.com/history/2009/8/28/frontier-culture-museum-1850-american-farm.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.backcountrynotes.com/history/2009/8/28/frontier-culture-museum-1850-american-farm.html"/><author><name>Jay Henderson</name></author><published>2009-08-28T17:21:02Z</published><updated>2009-08-28T17:21:02Z</updated><summary type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p><span class="thumbnail-image-float-right ssNonEditable"><span><a href="javascript:showFullImage('/display/ShowImage?imageUrl=%2Fstorage%2Ffrontier-culture-museum%2FAFC1850_00_900pxw.jpg%3F__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION%3D1251460189011',566,900);"><img src="http://www.backcountrynotes.com/storage/thumbnails/2108889-3982480-thumbnail.jpg?__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION=1251460206296" alt="" /></a></span><span class="thumbnail-caption" style="width: 202px;">Click on any image for a larger view</span></span>The 1850s American Farm exhibit at the <a class="offsite-link-inline" href="http://www.frontiermuseum.org/1850sAmericanFarm.html" target="_blank">Frontier Culture Museum</a> in Staunton, Virginia, features vintage structures including a sheathed log house.&nbsp; The buildings were located originally near Eagle Rock in Botetourt County, Virginia, and were moved to the Museum grounds and reconstructed as one of the original exhibits in 1988.</p>]]></summary></entry><entry><title>1820 Log Farm House at the Frontier Culture Museum</title><category term="1820"/><category term="Back Country"/><category term="Backcountry colonial"/><category term="Colonial America"/><category term="Colonial Back Country"/><category term="Colonial Virginia"/><category term="Frontier Culture Museum"/><category term="German immigrants"/><category term="Shenandoah Valley"/><category term="Virginia"/><category term="early settlers America"/><category term="farm"/><category term="house"/><category term="log cabins"/><category term="log houses"/><id>http://www.backcountrynotes.com/history/2009/8/26/1820-log-farm-house-at-the-frontier-culture-museum.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.backcountrynotes.com/history/2009/8/26/1820-log-farm-house-at-the-frontier-culture-museum.html"/><author><name>Jay Henderson</name></author><published>2009-08-26T13:19:14Z</published><updated>2009-08-26T13:19:14Z</updated><summary type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p><span class="thumbnail-image-float-right ssNonEditable"><span><a href="javascript:showFullImage('/display/ShowImage?imageUrl=%2Fstorage%2Ffrontier-culture-museum%2FFCM1820_00_600x509px.jpg%3F__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION%3D1251292992979',509,600);"><img src="http://www.backcountrynotes.com/storage/thumbnails/2108889-3962695-thumbnail.jpg?__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION=1251293014441" alt="" /></a></span><span class="thumbnail-caption" style="width: 152px;">Click on any image for a larger version</span></span>The 1820s American Farm at the Frontier Culture Museum in Staunton, Virginia, features a log house which incorporates an original log cabin built in 1773. The two wings of the house, which are joined by an enclosed dogtrot, demonstrate the progression in log-structure building techniques from colonial to early American times.]]></summary></entry><entry><title>Frontier Culture Museum -- 1740 Log Cabin</title><category term="1740"/><category term="Back Country"/><category term="Backcountry colonial"/><category term="Colonial America"/><category term="Colonial Back Country"/><category term="Colonial Virginia"/><category term="Frontier Culture Museum"/><category term="Scotch-Irish"/><category term="cabin"/><category term="early settlers America"/><category term="log cabins"/><category term="museum"/><id>http://www.backcountrynotes.com/history/2009/8/23/frontier-culture-museum-1740-log-cabin.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.backcountrynotes.com/history/2009/8/23/frontier-culture-museum-1740-log-cabin.html"/><author><name>Jay Henderson</name></author><published>2009-08-23T15:34:06Z</published><updated>2009-08-23T15:34:06Z</updated><summary type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p><span class="thumbnail-image-float-right ssNonEditable"><span><a href="javascript:showFullImage('/display/ShowImage?imageUrl=%2Fstorage%2Ffrontier-culture-museum%2FMFC1740_00_600pxw.jpg%3F__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION%3D1251041787821',469,600);"><img src="http://www.backcountrynotes.com/storage/thumbnails/2108889-3931346-thumbnail.jpg?__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION=1251041817028" alt="" /></a></span><span class="thumbnail-caption" style="width: 152px;">NOTE: Click on any image to view a larger version</span></span>The <a class="offsite-link-inline" href="http://www.frontiermuseum.org/1740.html" target="_blank">Frontier Culture Museum's 1740s log cabin</a> is displayed as a work in progress.&nbsp; The cabin is a typical peeled-log, saddle-notched settler's cabin of the kind favored by Scotch-Irish moving into the wilds of the Backcountry.&nbsp; The construction was simple and required few tools.&nbsp; This example is built with one door and no windows -- a common practice which led to laws requiring homesteader's cabins have at least one window.</p>
<p>Below: The settler's cabin, circa 1740, under construction.&nbsp; In the foreground, raw materials.&nbsp;</p>]]></summary></entry><entry><title>Virginia Frontier Culture Museum 1700s German Farm</title><category term="Backcountry colonial"/><category term="Colonial America"/><category term="Colonial Virginia"/><category term="Frontier Culture Museum"/><category term="German"/><category term="German immigrants"/><category term="Shenandoah Valley"/><category term="early settlers America"/><category term="settlers"/><id>http://www.backcountrynotes.com/history/2009/8/18/virginia-frontier-culture-museum-1700s-german-farm.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.backcountrynotes.com/history/2009/8/18/virginia-frontier-culture-museum-1700s-german-farm.html"/><author><name>Jay Henderson</name></author><published>2009-08-18T11:15:26Z</published><updated>2009-08-18T11:15:26Z</updated><summary type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p><span class="thumbnail-image-float-right ssNonEditable"><a href="javascript:showFullImage('/display/ShowImage?imageUrl=%2Fstorage%2Ffrontier-culture-museum%2FFCMGF_0_600pxw.jpg%3F__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION%3D1250561933410',600,600);"><img src="http://www.backcountrynotes.com/storage/thumbnails/2108889-3878892-thumbnail.jpg?__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION=1250561935422" alt="" /></a></span>The buildings comprising the 18th-century German Farm at the <a href="http://www.frontiermuseum.org/Germany.html" target="_blank">Frontier Culture Museum</a> originally stood in the Rhineland-Palitinate in western Germany. At that time, Germany was a region, not a nation. Most of the region was included in the Holy Roman Empire, but it was fractionated into <a class="offsite-link-inline" href="http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/historical/shepherd_1911/shepherd-c-122-123.jpg" target="_blank">smaller principalities</a>. A legal system held over from the Dark Ages, a seemingly endless series of <a class="offsite-link-inline" href="http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/historical/shepherd_1911/shepherd-c-125b.jpg" target="_blank">internecine wars</a>, religious persecutions and frequent droughts made life hard in much of Germany. Beginning in the late 17th century, an estimated one million Germans pulled up stakes and went looking for better places - - including more than 120,000 who migrated to the American colonies.</p>]]></summary></entry><entry><title>Frontier Culture Museum -- 1700s Irish Farmstead</title><category term="Backcountry colonial"/><category term="Colonial America"/><category term="Colonial Virginia"/><category term="Frontier Culture Museum"/><category term="Irish"/><category term="Scotch-Irish"/><category term="early settlers America"/><category term="farm"/><category term="linen"/><id>http://www.backcountrynotes.com/history/2009/8/12/frontier-culture-museum-1700s-irish-farmstead.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.backcountrynotes.com/history/2009/8/12/frontier-culture-museum-1700s-irish-farmstead.html"/><author><name>Jay Henderson</name></author><published>2009-08-12T12:00:06Z</published><updated>2009-08-12T12:00:06Z</updated><summary type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p><span class="thumbnail-image-float-right ssNonEditable"><span><a href="javascript:showFullImage('/display/ShowImage?imageUrl=%2Fstorage%2Ffrontier-culture-museum%2FFCMIR_00_400pxw.jpg%3F__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION%3D1250044918198',338,400);"><img src="http://www.backcountrynotes.com/storage/thumbnails/2108889-3835929-thumbnail.jpg?__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION=1250044953681" alt="" /></a></span><span class="thumbnail-caption" style="width: 202px;">Entry to Irish farmhouse.  Click on any image to view a larger size.</span></span>The buildings comprising the Frontier Culture Museum's Irish Farm originally stood in County Tyrone, Ulster (Northern Ireland).&nbsp; The Ulster Plantation was designed by the English to establish an English-dominated, Protestant colony in Ireland. The "plantation" was a large chunk of the Emerald Isle containing nine counties and many towns and farms. Its colonization began, interestingly, in 1607, the same time when other colonists were establishing Jamestown in Virginia.</p>]]></summary></entry><entry><title>Frontier Culture Museum -- 1700s Irish Forge</title><category term="Backcountry colonial"/><category term="Colonial Back Country"/><category term="Colonial Virginia"/><category term="Frontier Culture Museum"/><category term="Irish"/><category term="Scotch-Irish"/><category term="Shenandoah Valley"/><category term="early settlers America"/><category term="forge"/><id>http://www.backcountrynotes.com/history/2009/8/11/frontier-culture-museum-1700s-irish-forge.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.backcountrynotes.com/history/2009/8/11/frontier-culture-museum-1700s-irish-forge.html"/><author><name>Jay Henderson</name></author><published>2009-08-11T12:00:56Z</published><updated>2009-08-11T12:00:56Z</updated><summary type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p><span class="thumbnail-image-float-right ssNonEditable"><span><a href="javascript:showFullImage('/display/ShowImage?imageUrl=%2Fstorage%2Ffrontier-culture-museum%2FFCMIF_00_600pxw.jpg%3F__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION%3D1249957868145',788,600);"><img src="http://www.backcountrynotes.com/storage/thumbnails/2108889-3823168-thumbnail.jpg?__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION=1249960477438" alt="" /></a></span><span class="thumbnail-caption" style="width: 202px;">Click on any image in this article to view a larger version</span></span>The Irish Forge exhibit at Virginia's Frontier Culture Museum is housed in a building originally constructed in County Fermanagh, Ulster (Northern Ireland).&nbsp; The rustic architecture of this blacksmith's shop is typical of buildings constructed in northern and western Ireland at that time: solid stone construction, whitewashed, with a thatch roof.</p>
<p>Inside the Irish Forge, a Museum guide who knows what he's doing demonstrates how ironwork was made in the 18th century.]]></summary></entry><entry><title>Frontier Culture Museum -- 1600s English Farm</title><category term="Backcountry colonial"/><category term="Colonial America"/><category term="Colonial Back Country"/><category term="Colonial Virginia"/><category term="English"/><category term="Frontier Culture Museum"/><category term="Yeoman English"/><category term="early settlers America"/><category term="farm"/><category term="house"/><id>http://www.backcountrynotes.com/history/2009/8/10/frontier-culture-museum-1600s-english-farm.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.backcountrynotes.com/history/2009/8/10/frontier-culture-museum-1600s-english-farm.html"/><author><name>Jay Henderson</name></author><published>2009-08-10T12:00:29Z</published><updated>2009-08-10T12:00:29Z</updated><summary type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p><span class="thumbnail-image-float-right ssNonEditable"><span><a href="javascript:showFullImage('/display/ShowImage?imageUrl=%2Fstorage%2Ffrontier-culture-museum%2FFCMEF_00_600x600px.jpg%3F__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION%3D1249869408234',600,600);"><img src="http://www.backcountrynotes.com/storage/thumbnails/2108889-3813055-thumbnail.jpg?__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION=1249869433757" alt="" /></a></span><span class="thumbnail-caption" style="width: 152px;">Click on any image to view a larger version</span></span>The Virginia Frontier Culture Museum's English Farm installation features a yeoman farmer's house that was built in 1692 in Worchestershire, in west-central England.&nbsp; Many <a class="offsite-link-inline" href="http://www.questia.com/library/encyclopedia/yeoman.jsp" target="_blank">yeoman</a> farmers and other English commoners migrated from the western shires to America during colonial times, although their numbers most certainly did not include the builder of this house, who had to have been successful enough to own a small parcel of land on which to built a nice home.</p>]]></summary></entry></feed>