White Plains

2700 Old Walton Rd., Cookeville, Tennessee. County/parish: Putnam.

Added to the National Register of Historic Places August 11, 2009. NRIS 09000538.

1 contributing building.

Also known as:

  • PM 883

From Wikipedia:

White Plains (Cookeville, Tennessee)

White Plains is an antebellum plantation house located in Algood, Tennessee near the U.S. city of Cookeville. In the 19th century, the plantation provided a key stopover along the Walton Road, an early stagecoach road connecting Knoxville and Nashville, and in 1854 served as a temporary county seat for the newly formed Putnam County. In 2009, the house was added to the National Register of Historic Places.

The White Plains plantation was established in 1809 by William Quarles (1752–1814), a Revolutionary War veteran who had migrated to the area from Virginia. Quarles' grandson, Stephan Decatur Burton (1813–1892), built the White Plains house sometime around 1848, and in the late 1950s Harvey Draper bought the house and made numerous renovations.

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LC