A set of records of enslaved persons with unclear slaveholder associations. These record sets are arranged according to the name of the enslaved persons, alphabetically, either by the initial of their surname or their first name (in the case of persons whose surname is unknown or they have no surname). Research for this record is in progress. Information may change or develop.
A set of records of enslaved persons with unclear slaveholder associations. These record sets are arranged according to the name of the enslaved persons, alphabetically, either by the initial of their surname or their first name (in the case of persons whose surname is unknown or they have no surname). Research for this record is in progress. Information may change or develop.
A set of records of enslaved persons with unclear slaveholder associations. These record sets are arranged according to the name of the enslaved persons, alphabetically, either by the initial of their surname or their first name (in the case of persons whose surname is unknown or they have no surname). Research for this record is in progress. Information may change or develop.
A set of records of enslaved persons with unclear slaveholder associations. These record sets are arranged according to the name of the enslaved persons, alphabetically, either by the initial of their surname or their first name (in the case of persons whose surname is unknown or they have no surname). Research for this record is in progress. Information may change or develop.
A set of records of enslaved persons with unclear slaveholder associations. These record sets are arranged according to the name of the enslaved persons, alphabetically, either by the initial of their surname or their first name (in the case of persons whose surname is unknown or they have no surname).
A set of records of enslaved persons with unclear slaveholder associations. These record sets are arranged according to the name of the enslaved persons, alphabetically, either by the initial of their surname or their first name (in the case of persons whose surname is unknown or they have no surname). Research for this record is in progress. Information may change or develop.
"Inside this structure is the rockaway carriage that was purchased in 1880 by Julia Dinsmore in Cincinnati. She paid two hundred dollars for the carriage that features leather and corduroy upholstery. Not many families in rural Boone County would have been able to afford such a luxury. " --Cathy Callopy
Located along a rural stretch of Burlington Pike, the Dinsmore Homestead is a living document of the life of a prosperous and cultured Boone County farm family in the 19th century. In 1839 Silas Dinsmoor, a Scottish Presbyterian of New Hampshire, and his nephew, Mississippi planter James Dinsmore, purchased 700 acres of land between the Ohio River and Middle Creek. Here they established a diversified farm with sheep, orchards and basket willows, as well as a small vineyard (later ruined by the blight that ravaged the Ohio Valley wine industry).
"Many of the grain crops and, later, tobacco for Dinsmore Homestead were raised on the other side of Burlington Pike. The road itself did not exist until after the death of James Dinsmore.