jenseib
Mommy to Claire
- Joined
- Oct 28, 2006
- Messages
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I wandered around the side of the house to make my way to the backside to see what it looked like back there.

As you can see the front and back mirror each other.

Something we learned on the tour and something I had not known was that many plantations were built on rivers and the front doors often faced the river. Back then it was hard to get to them by land and most people traveled up and down the river to visit other plantations. Shirley was built with 2 front doors. I guess it was rude to have a visitor come in the back door and since they had a driveway to the front and also received many visitors by water they made it so that coming from either entrance was acceptable.



This was a very old tree and it was roped off so you couldn’t get too close. I guess the roots are fragile and they don’t want people disturbing it.


Looking back at the house from near the tree.







Back around to the front.



This was the kitchen building.


And it was now time to meet on the front steps for our tour. There were just 3 of us for this first tour. The other guy actually lived in Richmond, but said he had never been to visit the plantation and decided to check it out today.
We entered the house with our guide and sadly we were not allowed to take pictures inside, though I had known this prior to coming.
I believe we only toured the first floor of this house and the 2nd and 3rd floors are still lived in by the current owner …who is a descendent of the Hill family, the ones who built the house. He was a single man, but our guide told us he was planning to be married in a few weeks (and he was as it was posted on their facebook page) and he was an older gentleman and they were all so happy to have him get married.
The tour was very interesting and informative. They were very rich at times and actually pretty poor at times as well. They didn’t know about rotating crops so much back then and tobacco was the main crop and it took so much out of the soil that at times hardly anything would grow. Loans were taken, parts of the house were sold off to make money, etc., once being the roof that was made out of a metal that was needed for a particular war and it got the plantation out of debt. (I can’t remember what the roof was made of but it was an expensive metal and though it is sad it had to be sold, it did keep the plantation from going completely under and we now can see this beautiful place today). Also some members married into other influential families as well. The house had additions added over the years too. At one point there wasn’t a family heir to hand the house over to so I think it went to a nephew to keep it in the family.
All this was so interesting and we learned about different family members in each room we went into. The guy in our tour asked a LOT of questions. And while they were good questions, he kind of asked them in an interrupting way, or in a know it all way and it was slightly annoying at times. I could tell the guide was a little frustrated with him asking so many things and often told him she would get to that later in the tour. I had to laugh after we were done and Dad mentioned that he thought the guy was kind of rude. For my Dad to notice it meant that he was. LOL
The tour was about an hour long and we excited back out the front steps where we had entered. We thanked the guide and decided to look around a little more before heading to our next destination.
This area over there with a sign….at one point in time both sides of the main house had flanking houses …another thing I learned was very common for plantations and I never knew….and these buildings held bedrooms and guest quarters. I believe this side had burned down many years ago and the one on the other side was actually removed by a family member many years ago and rebuilt a few miles down the road to be the residence of a son. I never found out if it was still actually standing or not, but we obviously were not invited to go see it if it still is standing.


I guess I was going for odd angle pictures.



As you can see the front and back mirror each other.

Something we learned on the tour and something I had not known was that many plantations were built on rivers and the front doors often faced the river. Back then it was hard to get to them by land and most people traveled up and down the river to visit other plantations. Shirley was built with 2 front doors. I guess it was rude to have a visitor come in the back door and since they had a driveway to the front and also received many visitors by water they made it so that coming from either entrance was acceptable.



This was a very old tree and it was roped off so you couldn’t get too close. I guess the roots are fragile and they don’t want people disturbing it.


Looking back at the house from near the tree.







Back around to the front.



This was the kitchen building.


And it was now time to meet on the front steps for our tour. There were just 3 of us for this first tour. The other guy actually lived in Richmond, but said he had never been to visit the plantation and decided to check it out today.
We entered the house with our guide and sadly we were not allowed to take pictures inside, though I had known this prior to coming.
I believe we only toured the first floor of this house and the 2nd and 3rd floors are still lived in by the current owner …who is a descendent of the Hill family, the ones who built the house. He was a single man, but our guide told us he was planning to be married in a few weeks (and he was as it was posted on their facebook page) and he was an older gentleman and they were all so happy to have him get married.
The tour was very interesting and informative. They were very rich at times and actually pretty poor at times as well. They didn’t know about rotating crops so much back then and tobacco was the main crop and it took so much out of the soil that at times hardly anything would grow. Loans were taken, parts of the house were sold off to make money, etc., once being the roof that was made out of a metal that was needed for a particular war and it got the plantation out of debt. (I can’t remember what the roof was made of but it was an expensive metal and though it is sad it had to be sold, it did keep the plantation from going completely under and we now can see this beautiful place today). Also some members married into other influential families as well. The house had additions added over the years too. At one point there wasn’t a family heir to hand the house over to so I think it went to a nephew to keep it in the family.
All this was so interesting and we learned about different family members in each room we went into. The guy in our tour asked a LOT of questions. And while they were good questions, he kind of asked them in an interrupting way, or in a know it all way and it was slightly annoying at times. I could tell the guide was a little frustrated with him asking so many things and often told him she would get to that later in the tour. I had to laugh after we were done and Dad mentioned that he thought the guy was kind of rude. For my Dad to notice it meant that he was. LOL
The tour was about an hour long and we excited back out the front steps where we had entered. We thanked the guide and decided to look around a little more before heading to our next destination.
This area over there with a sign….at one point in time both sides of the main house had flanking houses …another thing I learned was very common for plantations and I never knew….and these buildings held bedrooms and guest quarters. I believe this side had burned down many years ago and the one on the other side was actually removed by a family member many years ago and rebuilt a few miles down the road to be the residence of a son. I never found out if it was still actually standing or not, but we obviously were not invited to go see it if it still is standing.


I guess I was going for odd angle pictures.

