HARMONY HALL PLANTATION

1615 River Road (Between Hwy 87 & 53)
White Oak, N.C. 28399
Open Sundays 2 - 4 PM
And By Appointment
For More Information About Harmony Hall, Call
Laurie at 9l0-866-4844

We are run by volunteers and our numbers are thin right now. We  plan to keep our regular Sunday hours, but it might be a good idea to call before you come.  We still make appointments for visitors during the week.  If you are interested in being one of our volunteers, we would love to hear from you. We still plan to have our annual spring event the last Saturday in April. Keep ckecking our site for later details.)

HARMONY HALL HERITAGE DAY

 

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  Harmony Hall has a long and interesting history. It was about 1768 that Colonel James A. Richardson built his home on a 12,000 acre tract on the Cape Fear River near the village of White Oak. A native of Stonington, Connecticut, who ran a West Indies shipping line, he had earlier been shipwrecked off Cape Hatteras and while waiting for the arrival of one of his ships, had explored the area. He liked the Cape Fear River bottom lands so much that he decided to settle and make his home there. About the same time he met a young widow, Elizabeth Neal Purdy, whose parents came from Barbados. They were married around 1768 and moved into the house he had been building.

   “This small, frame plantation house on the northeastern side of the Cape Fear presents a striking example of a regional form, which engaged double porches on land and water facades and a partially enclosed exterior stair rising between the landside porches. Here, in a rare survival, the exterior stair provides the only connection between first and second stories. The interior is simply finished and has a hall-parlor plan, later partitioned to create a center passage.”* (quote taken from A Guide to the Historic Architecture of Eastern North Carolina by Catherine W Bishir & Michael T Southern)

   It was here, according to local legend, that the seeds of General Cornwallis’ defeat at Yorktown were sown. As the story goes, late in the Revolution, General Cornwallis made Harmony Hall his headquarters on his way to Wilmington. One evening, while ascending the stairs, Mrs. Richardson overheard the general and his aide planning their campaign against General Nathaniel Greene whose army was in South Carolina. She wrote a note to her husband, then with Greene, outlining the British plans and sent it by the plantation overseer and his trusty horse. With Mrs. Richardson’s information, the American forces were able to anticipate the British movements, thus hastening the British retreat across the Carolinas to their ultimate surrender at Yorktown.

   For the earnest Revolutionary historian, there are several things wrong with the Cornwallis story. For one thing, it was in 1781 and after the Battle of Guilford Courthouse that we can trace Cornwallis’ route down the Cape Fear toward Wilmington. At that time General Greene’s battles in South Carolina were largely over. Another thing to remember is that the Cornwallis story was handed down orally for several generations before any of it was written down, so there was change for the story to grow between its infancy the full grown paper version. Yet, a story has to be conceived before it can grow; thus most people believe Mrs. Richardson must have seen Cornwallis or the story would never have been born.

   There are other arguments for the Elizabeth and Cornwallis meeting. History tells us that James Webster, Cornwallis’ aide, was mortally wounded in the Battle of Guilford Courthouse. Webster would have had to rest between Fayetteville and Elizabethtown. Harmony Hall and The Purdie Place were about the only remaining fine houses on the river at that time. Webster died and was buried in Elizabethtown. Where did he spend his last night? Surely there are no living witnesses who can tell us.

   Some believe the Cornwallis story came about because of Jane Meredith’s (c1970) novel, Harmony Hall, but the story was widely circulated long before that. The story may be a combination of tales about Richardson’s. For example, the John Jakes novel Charleston relates an incident of Cornwallis punishing a Mrs. Richardson for stealing his battle plans and sending them to General Greene. All we know is that it makes an exciting legend and that someone named Cornwallis did happen to surrender at Yourtown…and we do not have a King today.

   This house remained in the Richardson family until 1874 when it was acquired by Daniel S. Tatum. Tatum transferred the title to his daughter Sarah Margaret and her husband N. Austin Layton, Sr. In 1961, Mr. and Mrs. N. A. Layton Jr., of Winter Haven, Florida, deeded the structure to the Bladen County Historical Society.

   In late 1986, restoration on Harmony Hall began in earnest. Realization that the historical society did not own the surrounding land became abruptly evident when the tract was offered for sale. Because of a plea from the historical society, the Preservation Foundation purchased the 97 acres which surrounded the house. With funds raised, the historical society has been able to buy back the land and house from the Preservation Foundation. This transaction gives the site access to the nearby road as well as the Cape Fear River.

   Harmony Hall Plantation , owned by Bladen County Historical Society, is operated by 10 volunteers. The address is Harmony Hall Plantation, P O Box 297, White Oak, N. C. 28399.

Contact is Laurie at 9l0-866-4844.

    Several old buildings have been moved onto the property to give it a Village of Yesteryear atmosphere.  See other pictures below.

HARMONY HALL PLANTATION , NOW ORGANIZED AS HARMONY HALL FOUNDATION, INC., IS RUN BY VOLUNTEERS.  THE ADDRESS IS HARMONY HALL PLANTATION, PO BOX 297, WHITE OAK, N. C. 28399.
 

HARMONY HALL CHAPEL

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The Chapel is available for weddings.

  Harmony Hall Chapel, originally known as Kelly Freewill Holiness Church, was built in Kelly, N. C., more than a hundred years ago. It was also used by Methodist folks until they built their own church.

    On July 5, 1989, the Harmony Hall Restoration Committee agreed to purchase the building from J. B. Peshoff of Kelly. It was moved to Harmony Hall in 1993. The first sermon in it was conducted November 6, 1994, by Rev. F. Scott Lewis. On July 9, 1995. the chapel was formally dedicated to God, Rev. Samuel Richardson, and Mr. Layton Dunham. A bell tower, bell, piano, podium and piano have been donated. Pews were purchased from a church in Nags Head, N. C.

     The chapel fits well into the Harmony Hall village since it is documented that Francis Asbury, America's first Methodist Bishop, visited the home of Colonel Richardson as recorded in his journal for March 7, 1787:  "crossed the main ford of the Black River and came through a wild country to Colonel Richardson's; the colonel's wife is a tender, devoted woman." Asbury wrote on February 7, 1803,  "We lodged at Samuel Richardson's."  On January 21, 1811, he wrote "Came to Amos Richardson's  in the evening.  The parents of this man died in peace."

    Samuel Neal Richardson was a Methodist preacher, building the first Bethlehem Methodist Church on his property.  Samuel (1770-1851) and Amos (1772-1812) were sons of Col. James and Elizabeth Richardson.

 

Colly  District #41 School
CIRCA 1880
Restored by Eagle Scouts
Ben Tedder
and
Paul Chany
of Elizabethtown Boy Scout Troop 602
May 1992

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Come Visit Us Soon!!!

  

  Girl Scout Troop #600 fenced-in the playground and added an old hand pump for water in fulfillment of their Silver Leadership Award. Later scouter Summer Russell earned her Gold Leadership Award by adding an outhouse to the back of the playground (complete with a half moon).  A report to the Bladen County Board of Education dated December 3, 1888, shows that Colly District #41 School was one of the 74 schools in operation, teaching six grades, with an average term of about 10 weeks. In 1914 Colly District #41 (changed to #2) was one of 118 schools in Bladen County. The average term had reached 107 days. This school was originally located off Hwy 701, approximately two miles north of White Lake. It now stands on the Harmony Hall complex; Bladen county Board of Education does not recognize it as an active school; its hours of operation are very limited.

 

BUTLER CORN CRIB

  This barn was built by Mr. John Hurt sometime in the 1800’s. It was used to store corn and other farm products. The barn was a gift from the Butler family and set up for use about 1990.

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BRISSON-GUYTON LOG HOME

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  This log house dates back to about 1835 and was used as a residence until about 1935. According to Jessie Brisson Riddle of Dublin, "My daddy was born in that log house. David Brisson, my grandfather was born there and his father, Joseph Brisson, was raised there."

 

EARL TATUM STORE

  This store was built in the early 1890’s and was later sold to D. M. Tatum, whose sons operated the store until after their father’s death. Later the business was sold to Earl Tatum, who continued to operate it until 1965. Later it became the property of Edward Vanstory who graciously donated it to Harmony Hall March 21, 1996. Much of the old merchandise is still on the shelves and counters.

  Girl Scout Troop #107 helped get this store ready for its grand opening in 1997.  Scouter Kathrny Bradley earned her Gold Leadership Award by directing the restoration of the store and making a video tape for visitors to enjoy during their visit.  In 1998, scouter Julie Britt secured and had a pot-bellied stove installed in the store to make the restoration complete.

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SHAW-McMILLAN HOUSE/KITCHEN

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  Built in 1784, this was the home of Ronald McMillan, his wife, and at least six of seven children. It was located in the Elkton community near the Bladen/Columbus County line. About 1820, this cypress log structure measuring 16 1/2 feet square, became the home of daughter Mary and her husband Daniel Shaw. A descendant, Albert Shaw, donated it to Harmony Hall and it is used as a model kitchen behind the plantation home. Thanks to kind ownership for several generations, the Shaw-McMillan home stands proudly as the building closest to the age of the house itself.

 

 

  Sharon Samuels, who has worked at Old Salem Village in Winston Salem, is shown with bread she made in the fireplace of this kitchen at the 1997 reunion/picnic. 

  

 

WANDA CAMPBELL COTTAGE

  This building, just a part of the home that Wanda Campbell and her husband had shared, was bought and put in place here on March 13, 1995. It became part of the Harmony Hall complex as a monument for the diligent work "Miss Wanda" has done for the history of the county and particularly Harmony Hall. It is used for meetings.
IT IS NOW A CARETAKER'S COTTAGE.

 

MCCLURE GATE HOUSE

  

  Once a log motel, this was donated by Earl McClure and moved to Harmony Hall on June 3. 1989.  (Recently a couple visited and said it was just like the motel at White Lake where they had spent their honeymoon many years ago.)

 

CAIN KITCHEN

  In 1989, the Cain kitchen and dining room was given to Harmony Hall Restoration by Mrs. Ehelene Cain Morgan and her children, Joy and Marion of New Bern, N. C. It is a [art of the Edward James Cain house estate in White Oak.

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SUGGS GENERAL STORE

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  John A. Suggs began his store business on the White Oak-Elizabethtown (53) road in 1914 and met the needs of his neighbors with general merchandise and farm supplies. His store now sits at 1615 River Road, at the entrance to Harmony Hall Plantation. The store closed in 1969 and was vacant until it found a new home as Harmony Hall General Store in the late 1980’s. Part of the shelving in it came from the old Henry C Melvin store in Dublin. The store is now being turned into a visitor center and museum.


Photo Gallery

UPCOMING EVENTS


 

Artillery Group Coming Every Fourth Sunday
Groups Are Harrington Light Artillery, Company A and 13th Battalion

2008 Dates Are As Follows
     August 24
     Sept 28
     November 23
     December 28
Time - 2pm untill 4pm.

Gospel Music in the Chapel on Saturdays at 1pm
2008 Schedule is as Follows
August 30...Heavenly Sunrise (Gospel)
    September 6...Pierce Choir (Gospel)
   Sept 13..Larry Chason (Gospel)
   Sept 27..Carla and Redemption (Gospel)
   Oct 4..Marksmen Quarter (Gospel)
   Oct 18...Youth in Christ (Gospel)
   Oct 25..T R Reed and the Boys (Bluegrass)
ALL OF THESE EVENTS START AT 1 PM
ON SATURDAY IN THE CHAPEL

Christmas Celebration At 18th Century Harmony Hall
December 6, 2008

Admission is Free To All
Contributions Accepted


For More Information About Harmony Hall

Contact LAURIE AT 910-866-4844

rlsmith@intrstar.net


This is the official site for Harmony Hall 
in White Oak, North Carolina.

Boy Scout and Girl Scout Troops (and projects) are welcome!