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Nathaniel Smithson House

Central passage plan architecture in TennesseeHouses completed in 1840Houses in Williamson County, TennesseeHouses on the National Register of Historic Places in TennesseeItalianate architecture in Tennessee
National Register of Historic Places in Williamson County, TennesseeWilliamson County, Tennessee Registered Historic Place stubs
Nathaniel Smithson House
Nathaniel Smithson House

The Nathaniel Smithson House is a property in Peytonsville, Tennessee, which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.The house is a two-story brick central passage plan house, built c. 1840. The front facade has brick is laid in Flemish bond and a one-story Italianate-style porch added in c. 1880. Brick elsewhere is laid in five course common bond.When listed the property included two contributing buildings and one non-contributing building on an area of 3.2 acres (1.3 ha). A one-story frame smokehouse built c. 1880, behind the main house, is the second contributing building. A one-story c.1900 frame building which served as a store elsewhere was moved to the property later was deemed non-contributing.The NRHP eligibility of the property was covered in a 1988 study of Williamson County historical resources.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Nathaniel Smithson House (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Nathaniel Smithson House
Peytonsville Road,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 35.81834 ° E -86.777 °
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Address

Peytonsville Road

Peytonsville Road
37064
Tennessee, United States
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Nathaniel Smithson House
Nathaniel Smithson House
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Smithson–McCall Farm

Smithson–McCall Farm is a 256.3-acre (103.7 ha) historic district in Bethesda, Tennessee. The farm was listed under the National Register of Historic Places in 2007. The listing claims that the property "documents the impact of the progressive agricultural movement of the early twentieth century on the operations and landscape of a middle-class family farm," and includes an "architecturally significant group of buildings and structures, placed within an agricultural landscape of high integrity...that represents a good example of farmstead architecture in Middle Tennessee and that reflects the impact of the Progressive Farm movement of the early twentieth century".: 12 The property has also been known as Smithson-Fisher Farm, Happy Hills Farm, WM. 1043, Fisher Farm, and Bag End Farm throughout its history.The farmhouse was constructed c. 1830 and changed significantly c. 1860 and c. 1920. Additional farm structures were added during c.1920-c.1940, including a dairy barn, a dairy silo, a well house, a burley tobacco barn, a water trough, a garage, a smokehouse and a chicken coop. The property includes four ponds. It includes Colonial Revival and "Hall and parlor" architecture and other styles. When listed, the district included seven contributing buildings, six contributing structures, and one contributing site.The listing is described in its NRHP nomination document.The property was covered in a study of Historic Family Farms in Middle Tennessee MPS.As "Fisher Farm", it is listed as a Tennessee Century Farm. It continues as a working farm, raising sheep.