Orange County NC Website
26 <br /> collection of fieldstones, but we could not substantiate the <br /> claim. [Todd Peck and Jody Carter] <br /> 4. Craig Manor Ruins This house was once an elaborate 1920's mansion that has <br /> burned in recent years. The ruins feature the original <br /> chimney, the porch balustrade constructed of cast concrete, <br /> and the remains of a smaller site, also burned. There is <br /> also an unidentified ruin which contains a large stone <br /> column and a concrete bench. They might have been <br /> pushed down the hill from the original house. [Todd Peck <br /> and Jody Caner] <br /> Craig Manor is the site of a complex of houses and farm <br /> buildings owned and occupied by members of the Strayhorn <br /> family and then by their descendants in the Craig family, <br /> beginning in the mid-eighteenth century and lasting until <br /> the late 1980's, when the buildings were destroyed by fire. <br /> Extensive re-building of the central section of the main <br /> house in the 1920's might have altered or destroyed <br /> archaeological remains from the mid-eighteenth century, <br /> but the vicinity of the Craig house could have <br /> archaeological remains of other buildings, such as slave or <br /> servant quarters, barns and stables, smokehouses,dairies, <br /> and other farm structures. [Preliminary Evaluation] <br /> S. Mac House This house is a well-maintained, typical bungalow featuring <br /> exposed rafter ends, brackets under the eaves, and 3/1 sash <br /> windows. The roofline is characterized by a clipped front <br /> gable. There is a frame wooden shed used for storage west <br /> of the house, and a privy just north of that. The house <br /> occupies an interesting site, located on the rail line and in <br /> a heavily forested area. <br /> Josette Mac, the owner of the house, did not know the <br /> exact date of construction but did say she was born in the <br /> house forty-nine years ago. She said her parents had lived <br /> there several years prior to her birth and had bought the <br /> house from another family who had lived there previously. <br /> fTodd Peck and Jody Carter] <br /> The location of the above described sites is shown on the accompanying map. A five-acre <br /> "buffer" has been delineated in association with each site for the purpose of providing a tract <br /> of land of sufficient size to either keep development away from the site until more in-depth <br /> studies; e.g., archaeological excavations, can be completed or preserve the immediate <br /> surroundings. <br />