Point of Honor is an historic home, now a city museum, located in Lynchburg, Virginia.[3] The property has commanding views of the city and the James River. Its name originated due to the land on which it is built being used as a clandestine dueling ground.[4]

Point of Honor
Point of Honor, Lynchburg VA, November 2008
Point of Honor is located in Virginia
Point of Honor
Point of Honor is located in the United States
Point of Honor
Location112 Cabell St., Lynchburg, Virginia
Coordinates37°25′13″N 79°8′39″W / 37.42028°N 79.14417°W / 37.42028; -79.14417
Area4 acres (1.6 ha)
Built1806 (1806)
Architectural styleFederal
NRHP reference No.70000872[1]
VLR No.118-0014
Significant dates
Added to NRHPFebruary 26, 1970
Designated VLRDecember 2, 1969[2]

History

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Its builder and designer, Dr. George Cabell, was a friend of Thomas Jefferson, and physician to Patrick Henry.[5] Before building the house, he purchased 856 acres of land including Daniel's Island, Treasure Island and Woodruff Island from Lewellen Jones, who had bought it from Christopher Lynch, son of Quaker patriot Charles Lynch (1736–1796) and nephew of John Lynch, who started the ferry for which the city is named.

After Cabell died of complications after falling off a horse in 1823, and his widow died three years later, it passed to William Lewis Cabell, who may have leased it to the Langhorne family (as discussed below), before he and his wife Eliza Daniel died of tuberculosis in 1830. It was inherited by her father, Judge William Daniel (delegate to the Virginia general assembly 1798–1799). When he too died in 1839, it passed to his son William Daniel Jr. (Eliza's brother and also the father of United States Senator John Warwick Daniel, "the Lame Lion of Lynchburg.")[6]

David P. Payne bought the house in two acres of land in 1848, and in 1857 sold it back to Daniel, who sold it to Colonel Robert L. Owen Sr., who was President of the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad, and whose son Robert Latham Owen Jr. later became a United States Senator. Owen ran the railroad during the American Civil War, and became a state senator immediately afterward, but resigned his post because he opposed consolidating this railroad with others acquired by William Mahone. Owen died a financially ruined man in 1873, the same year the merged railroad went bankrupt, and the family mansion again changed hands.

At two different times in the 19th century, members of the Langhorne family owned Point of Honor. Henry Langhorne, who owned the Langhorne Mills in Lynchburg, purchased it in 1828.[7] Later, but still before the war, John S. Langhorne held the residence. His eldest son Chiswell Langhorne became a wealthy industrialist, and daughter Elizabeth Langhorne Lewis was a prominent suffragette.[8] John S. Langhorne's granddaughters included Mrs. Charles Dana Gibson (the original Gibson Girl), and Nancy Langhorne, Viscountess Lady Astor (the first woman elected to the British Parliament).[9]

By 1878 it was owned by L.E. Lichford, a grocery wholesaler who also had a warehouse nearby. Three generations of the family owned the property, during which time the surrounding area developed. James R. Gilliam Jr. bought the house in 1928 and deeded it to the City of Lynchburg, which used part of the property as a recreation center until the Historical Foundation received the deed in 1968.[10]

Architecture

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The irregularly shaped two-story Federal mansion is built of stuccoed brick. The facade is composed of a three-bay center section flanked by two octagonal ended projections. Construction was started in 1806, and completed in 1815. It was renovated about two decades later, with wallpaper and stucco added, and perhaps a porch which was removed during the 1977 restoration.[11]

It bears a strong relationship to the Hancock-Wirt-Caskie House in Richmond, Virginia.

It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1970,[1] and opened as a public museum in 1978.[11]

References

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  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  2. ^ "Virginia Landmarks Register". Virginia Department of Historic Resources. Retrieved 19 March 2013.
  3. ^ "Home". pointofhonor.org.
  4. ^ "Images of America, Lynchburg 1757-2007", page 31, 2007, ISBN 978-0-7385-4388-8, Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 2006934432
  5. ^ Virginia Historic Landmarks Commission Staff (October 1969). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Point of Honor" (PDF). Virginia Department of Historic Resources. and Accompanying photo
  6. ^ Gayle Grisser, "Point of Honor: Dedicated individuals helpe landmark survive" in Tales of the Hill City: Lynchburg Bicentennial 1786–1796 (Carter Glass Newspapers Inc.) pp. 90–91.
  7. ^ Langhorne, James Callaway (2013). The Virginia Langhornes. Lynchburg, Virginia: Blackwell Press. ISBN 978-1-938205-10-1.
  8. ^ "Broadsides Advertising Public Speeches on Woman Suffrage, 1915–1916". Virginia Memory. Library of Virginia. Archived from the original on December 8, 2011.
  9. ^ "Point of Honor | Lynchburg Virginia". pointofhonor.org. Archived from the original on 2007-07-29.
  10. ^ Griisser p. 91
  11. ^ a b Griiser p. 91
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ELIZA 3
HOME 3
languages 2
Note 1
os 6
web 1