Norris-Holland-Hare House | |
Completion Date: | 1805 |
Status: | Private residence |
Building Type: | farmhouse |
Architectural Style: | Federal |
Location: | 2329 Avent Ferry Road Holly Springs, North Carolina, U.S. |
The Norris-Holland-Hare House is a historic Federal style farm house in Holly Springs, North Carolina. It is the oldest building in the town of Holly Springs. The house was used as a field hospital by the Union Army following the Battle of Bentonville of the American Civil War.
The Norris-Holland-Hare House was built around 1805 by Needham Norris, a Baptist minister and the son of American Revolutionary War veteran Pvt. John Norris Jr.[1] [2] Needham Norris was the grandfather of the Raleigh socialite Cornelia Alice Norris. The house was constructed on a portion of a land grant given to John Norris Jr.[3] Built in the Federal style, the house features wood sash windows, plain weatherboards, stone foundation piers, and Flemish bond brick chimneys.[4] Norris bequeathed the house and farm to his nephew, Simpson Washington Holland.[2]
In September 1864, Holland traveled to Virginia to search for his brother, a Confederate soldier fighting in the American Civil War.[2] Holland died two months later, without having returned home.[2] The widowed Mary Ann Matthews Holland was left to care for their young children.[2]
In April 1865, after the Battle of Bentonville, an encampment of Union soldiers encircled the house.[2] [3] The family lived upstairs while the soldiers occupied the first floor as a field hospital.[2] [5]
The home later passed to the Hare family, descendants of the Hollands, who owned it until 2004.[3]
In 2017, the town purchased the 1,904-square-foot house to save it from demolition, with plans to sell it with preservation requirements.[2] The home was purchased by a family later that year.