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Program
Ohio History Connection
Subject
House
Location
8505 State Route 534, Mesopotamia, OH 44439, USA
Lat/Long
41.45639, -80.955181
Grant Recipient
Ohio History Connection
Historic Marker

OLD STONE HOUSE

 

Inscription

OLD STONE HOUSE

Mesopotamia Township, Trumbull County was a part of the Western Reserve, 3.3 million acres in Northeast Ohio claimed by Connecticut. After the Treaty of Greenville extinguished American Indian title in 1795, the state sold most of the land to the Connecticut Land Company (except for the Firelands to the west). The company’s proprietors then sold the land to settlers from Connecticut and the east and they in turn brought to the west their ideas for what a solid home should look like. (Continued on other side)

(Continued from other side) Built along a ridge south of Mesopotamia Center c. 1825, this house has front facade whose stone chosen from a nearby quarry for its purple mineral bands. Central doorways, front and back, divide the façade symmetrically. A hallway between the doors divides the interior and leads to an addition built in 1997. The house is an example of the Greek Revival architectural style, featuring cornice returns in the gable ends of the roof, wider frieze beneath the roof line, and sidelights at the front entrance. The style was common in the Western Reserve at the time.

WILLIAM G. POMEROY FOUNDATION
OLD STONE HOUSE
THE OHIO HISTORY CONNECTION
2020


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