Dixon

402 Limehouse rd., Shacklefords, Virginia. County/parish: King And Queen.

Added to the National Register of Historic Places January 20, 2005. NRIS 04001539.

1 contributing building.

Also known as:

  • 049-0019
  • Dixon Plantation

From Wikipedia:

Dixon (Shacklefords, Virginia)

Dixon, also known as Dixon's Plantation, was a privately owned historic plantation house (1793-2021) in King and Queen County, Virginia on the Mattaponi River—a tributary of the York River in one of Virginia's historic slavery-dependent tobacco-growing regions. The property was situated between the two unincorporated communities of Shacklefords and King and Queen Court House, Virginia.

Dated (by tree-rings) to 1793, the plantation's surviving central residence was a two-story, five-bay, symmetrical frame house with a gambrel roof, brick foundation and brick end-walls—the latter featuring Flemish bond and internal (rather than expressed) chimneys.

Located between two adjacent plantations, the earliest owners of the property were William Meredith and subsequently Richard Dixon, of whom little is known. The plantation and home were named after Richard Dixon, and he is credited with constructing the surviving residence.

At the time of its successful nomination to the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in 2005, Dixon was one of eight surviving gambrel-roof residences from the eighteenth and early nineteenth century in King and Queen County, Virginia.

A fire in the spring of 2021 completely destroyed Dixon.

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National Park Service documentation: https://catalog.archives.gov/id/41681385

LC