197-acre commercial/agriculture-zoned farm in Upper Northumberland County. Built in 1801, an early American three-story stone home (Long Square Farm) with original details in surprisingly good condition. Hard-to-find craftsmanship including wide-plank floors, beautiful ornate mantels, and raised-panel window jams. Vertical wood-plank walls; fireplaces in almost every room, including a summer kitchen with exposed beams and walk-in hearth. Plaster walls in good condition. The main kitchen has brick flooring and needs some updates. The kitchen is bordered by the dining room with a bee-hive oven. The farm consists of many outbuildings, shops, sheds, and a large bank barn. There is a large pond on the property; 9,100' of road frontage; topography is level with 170 acres of good tillable soil and 10 acres of woodland.Long Square was built in 1801 by Daniel Montgomery, a captain in the revoluti...
197-acre commercial/agriculture-zoned farm in Upper Northumberland County. Built in 1801, an early American three-story stone home (Long Square Farm) with original details in surprisingly good condition. Hard-to-find craftsmanship including wide-plank floors, beautiful ornate mantels, and raised-panel window jams. Vertical wood-plank walls; fireplaces in almost every room, including a summer kitchen with exposed beams and walk-in hearth. Plaster walls in good condition. The main kitchen has brick flooring and needs some updates. The kitchen is bordered by the dining room with a bee-hive oven. The farm consists of many outbuildings, shops, sheds, and a large bank barn. There is a large pond on the property; 9,100' of road frontage; topography is level with 170 acres of good tillable soil and 10 acres of woodland.Long Square was built in 1801 by Daniel Montgomery, a captain in the revolutionary war, for whom Danville was named. The house was a gift to his daughter, Jane, for her marriage to John Bryson. John Bryson was a Methodist minister who preached at Warrior Run, and ran a school for Greek and Latin. Many of his students boarded at Long Square and stayed on the third floor. Bryson was a well-known theologian, and Joseph Priestley once ate dinner at the farm.
From Turbotville, take Route 54 West, and the property is on the left, on Koch Road.