A 1789 farmhouse was incorporated by Wilson Eyre Jr. into the immense English Gothic Revival country seat of Walter M. Jeffords, who acquired some two thousand acres in the vicinity of the Rose Tree Hunt. From the front, the house nestles into its site, but its rear wings extend out on great stone terraces that in classic Eyre fashion merged the site with the living spaces. With its great stone chimneys, channeled down their centers in the manner of the houses in the vicinity of George Washington's ancestral Sulgrave Manor in Oxfordshire, England, the house blends Anglophilia and nationalism while representing the landed gentry's lifestyle. In so rural a location
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“Hunting Hill,” Walter Jeffords House
1789; 1915–1916, Eyre and McIlvaine. Ridley Creek State Park
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