From The Archives
c. 1830 Federal
Clover, South Carolina 29710
Perfect B&B
Partially restored home on 4 acres with barn and potential guest house.
Scroll down below the map for more information
Scroll down below the map for more information
2 Stories | |
Bedrooms | 4 |
Full Baths | 3 |
Half Baths | 1 |
Heated Sq. Ft. | 3,200 |
Acres | 4.0 |
Features.
- 1st Floor Bath
- 1st Floor Bedroom
- Attic
- Den
- Dining room
- Entry Hall
- Foyer
- Kitchen
- Laundry Room
- Living room
- Unfinished Basement
- Master bedroom downstairs
- Driveway - Dirt
- Fenced Yard
- Garden
- Guest House
- Porch
- Storage Building
- Workshop
- Carpet
- Ceiling Fans
- Ceramic Tile
- Fireplaces
- Gas Logs
- Original wood windows
- Vinyl floors
- Walk-In Closet(s)
- Wood floors
- Tin Roof
- Central air
- Dishwasher
- Disposal
- Gas heating
- Range
- Refrigerator
- Septic Tank
- Water Heater - Electric
- Claw-foot Tub(s)
No Contact Information.
This listing is archived and is not for sale.
Contact information is not available for archived listings.
Home features 10' ceilings and original dental moldings. It is perfectly situated to be a B&B in a fast growing area just south of Charlotte where there are no hotels! Only 25 minutes from airport, Westinghouse area, only 10 minutes from Lake Wylie on Charlotte's south border. Perfect for entertaining, hosting weddings or boarding horses.
Upstairs bedroom wall bears mark of John J Jackson, Jan. 26. 1858. He was 17 and died 3 years later, as did his brother shortly thereafter. Civil war soldiers? Their sister also died about 18 months earlier leaving the family childless. The Jackson clan still lives in this area. In fact, Jackson Lake is just down the road.
The exact date of the house isn't known. But construction methods date it to between 1790 and 1830 which corresponds with John Jackson's father building the house. Three generations of the family are buried just down the road.
Upstairs bedroom wall bears mark of John J Jackson, Jan. 26. 1858. He was 17 and died 3 years later, as did his brother shortly thereafter. Civil war soldiers? Their sister also died about 18 months earlier leaving the family childless. The Jackson clan still lives in this area. In fact, Jackson Lake is just down the road.
The exact date of the house isn't known. But construction methods date it to between 1790 and 1830 which corresponds with John Jackson's father building the house. Three generations of the family are buried just down the road.
Archived in March, 2011
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