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Five County Stadium

1991 establishments in North CarolinaBaseball venues in North CarolinaCarolina League ballparksMinor league baseball venuesNorth Carolina sports venue stubs
Southern United States baseball venue stubsSports in Raleigh-DurhamSports venues completed in 1991Sports venues in Wake County, North Carolina
Carolina Mudcats at Five County Stadium
Carolina Mudcats at Five County Stadium

Five County Stadium is a baseball stadium located in Zebulon, North Carolina, a suburb of Raleigh. It is the home of the Carolina Mudcats of the Carolina League. The ballpark, which was opened in 1991 and extensively renovated in 1999, has a capacity of 6,500. The stadium's name comes from its location – the stadium property is located in Wake County, within 5 miles (8.0 km) of Franklin, Nash, Johnston, and Wilson counties. US 264 passes by the stadium at a generally northwest-to-southeast angle (behind left and center fields), while NC 39 skirts the east side of the property (right field). Parking lots surround the field on the other sides, and a large grass field, often used as a campground, lies behind home plate.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Five County Stadium (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Five County Stadium
NC 39,

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Wikipedia: Five County StadiumContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 35.817222222222 ° E -78.27 °
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Address

NC 39
27597
North Carolina, United States
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Carolina Mudcats at Five County Stadium
Carolina Mudcats at Five County Stadium
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Bennett Bunn Plantation
Bennett Bunn Plantation

The Bennett Bunn Plantation is a historic farm near Zebulon, North Carolina, a suburb of Raleigh. The plantation, located beside US 264 in eastern Wake County, consists of a two-story house, built in 1833, barns, and 162 acres (66 ha) of farmland and forests. The property was owned by generations of the Bunn family until 2000 when Grace Hutchins, great-granddaughter of Bennet Bunn, sold the property for $1.9 million (~$3.08 million in 2022). The home is still used as a private residence and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in February 1986.Bennett Bunn inherited the land from his father in the 1820s. He lived in a log cabin on the property until he had raised enough money to construct the house. With the use of 16 enslaved people, Bunn grew wheat and corn, and raised livestock. Each generation left the property to the youngest daughter. After Hutchins inherited the land, she renovated the house by installing electricity and plumbing, as well as adding a kitchen, sunroom, and bathrooms.The Bennett Bunn house is an example of Federal architecture, a popular style for homes during the Antebellum period of the South. The driveway is lined with cedar trees that were planted in the 1920s by Alac and Avon Bunn.During the Civil War, a robber threw a torch through a front window of the house. The mark left by the torch hitting the floor is still visible. A mantel clock that was given to the Bunns by a Union soldier is displayed in the house. The soldier had looted the clock from another location and was tired of carrying it. A memorial to two enslaved people who died in the 1860s, Simon Bunn and Joni Piedelle, is written on one of the walls. Five enslaved people who worked at the Bunn plantation are buried in a small cemetery on the property.