This was the Day Room at Hope Plantation. The children had their meals here, had lessons here from visiting tutors, and sometimes played here as well. ... (read more)
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The Historic Hope Plantation interprets two historic properties in Northeastern North Carolina: the 1763 King-Bazemore House and the 1803 Governor David Stone Mansion, Hope House. We are open for tours 7 days a week, and offer a wide variety of educational programs.
Find out more at: www.hopeplantation.org/
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This was the Day Room at Hope Plantation. The children had their meals here, had lessons here from visiting tutors, and sometimes played here as well. ... (read more)
Hannah Stone had 11 children, 5 of whom survived to be adults. There was always a baby in the cradle at Hope Plantation. This is one ... (read more)
This was taken during our Harvest Festival at Hope in 2010. We had reenactors playing the Stone Family, Slaves who worked in the Mansion, and guests ... (read more)
Detail of the molding work in the pediment of the back door of the Mansion. The carving and interior wood work creation for the Mansion was ... (read more)
The back of the Mansion now faces the main road, Highway 308, also called Governor's Road. Originally, the main Halifax road ran in front of the ... (read more)
The King-Bazemore House was built in 1763 by William King. King was a yeoman farmer and a cooper. A few years after the house was finished, ... (read more)
This room was originally interpreted as Governor and Mrs Stone's room, which never felt right. It was too small, it was underneath the entertaining room which ... (read more)
With the re-reading of the inventory at Hope, we realized that this room, which we originally interpreted as the Boy's bedroom, was the head house man's ... (read more)
We had horse and wagon rides from the Mansion to the Visitor's Center! (read more)
More vendors at our Harvest Festival! (read more)
A view of some of the vendor booths at the 2010 Harvest Festival at Hope Plantation (read more)
With a generous grant from the Golden Leaf Foundation, we were able to recreate the interior of a slave cabin at Hope Plantation. We used the ... (read more)
Another view of our two interpreters hard at work in the recreated carpenter shop at Hope Plantation during our 2010 Harvest Festival (read more)
This is a view of the wine cellar at Hope Plantation. The stair case is the service stair that leads to the first floor of the ... (read more)
There is a recreation of the carpenter's shop that was on the Hope Plantation campus. These are two living history interpreters working with the collection of ... (read more)
This is a view from the front balcony of Hope Plantation, showing people setting up for our annual Harvest Festival (read more)
Another interior view of the Library at Hope. (read more)
This was the original layout of the second floor bedroom at Hope. It is next to the entertaining room, and we kept the bed, but moved ... (read more)
This child's miniature table, chairs, and tea service are in the girl's bedroom at Hope Plantation. David and Hannah Stone had 10 daughters and 1 son. ... (read more)
David Stone had one of the largest library's in North Carolina, with over 1,400 books. He had books on medicine, religion and philosophy, history, and law. ... (read more)
The Kitchen was reconstructed on the site of the original kitchen in 2001. We know this was the site of the first kitchen and its general ... (read more)
The entertaining room on the second floor of the Hope Mansion. This room was the heart of the Mansion, all of the major entertaining from dinners ... (read more)
Hope Plantation is called a through hall style house because the hallway runs the length of the house. The segmented arch in the middle of the ... (read more)
This was taken at Harvest Day, November 6, 2010. (read more)
This is the front porch of the King-Bazemore House, built in 1763 and expanded in 1810. (read more)
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