Beatty-Corbett House Explained

Beatty-Corbett House
Location:SR 701 at SR 1200, near Ivanhoe, North Carolina
Coordinates:34.5531°N -78.2525°W
Built:c., c. 1900, c. 1920
Architecture:Classical Revival, Greek Revival
Added:March 17, 1986
Refnum:86000549

Beatty-Corbett House is a historic plantation house located near Ivanhoe, in Sampson County, Pender County, and Bladen County. The plantation is located at the tripoint of Sampson, Pender, and Bladen counties, with the house itself being located in Pender County. A two-story, side-hall Greek Revival style block was built about 1850, with a two-story, five-bay, double pile Classical Revival house added about 1900, and a two-room ell added about 1920. The central bay of the c. 1900 section features a two-story portico. Also on the property are the contributing round-notched log stable, smokehouse, tool shed, washhouse, a sulfur spring, tobacco barn, several sections of ornate cast iron fence, the site of a former turpentine still, the site of a former riverboat landing (Beatty's Landing), and the site of a former cotton gin.[1]

It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Thomas Butchko and Jim Sumner. Beatty-Corbett House . National Register of Historic Places - Nomination and Inventory . October 1985. North Carolina State Historic Preservation Office . 2015-02-01.