A beautiful, large parcel of land located in the Yadkin Valley of North Carolina in the Foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains! Over 35-acres of fertile, fenced bottom land adjacent to a large stream running along the northern boundary. Only 20-minutes from Blowing Rock and the Blue Ridge Parkway. This property has a timber / farm tax deferment on it's 681.04-acres with taxes amounting only to $1,189.00 per year. Plenty of turkey, deer, and and occasional black bear. Great views of the Blue Ridge Mountain chain. Mild winters but close to skiing at Beech Mt., Sugar Mt., and Appalachian Ski Mt Adjacent to Fort Defiance (see below).
Fort Defiance
Written by North Carolina History Project
The home of Revolutionary War general William Lenoir, Fort Defiance was built in what is now Caldwell County in 1792. Prior to Lenoirs ownership, the house was built on a fort site that was used by Bri...
The home of Revolutionary War general William Lenoir, Fort Defiance was built in what is now Caldwell County in 1792. Prior to Lenoirs ownership, the house was built on a fort site that was used by British colonists. Lenoir moved from Virginia to find a suitable place to live for his large family. He found such a place in the Yadkin Valley, which he called the sweetest spot on earth. After the Revolutionary War, he purchased the 2,000-acre site, Fort Defiance. Construction started in 1788 and finished in 1792. The house served from 1805 to 1880 as a post office, according to Richard A. Schrader. In that time, the home also served intermittently as a home to William Lenoirs descendants. The 2,000-acre tract was divided among William Lenoirs children after his 1839 death, and the family built their homes around Fort Defiance. Almost 170 years after its construction, Fort Defiance was in such bad condition that William Lenoirs descendents started the Fort Defiance Project to renovate the house and maintain the grounds. The Caldwell County Historical Society purchased the home in 1964 and began restoration in earnest. After 20 years, a grant from the state legislature, and several fund-raising events, the restoration project was complete and Fort Defiance was placed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Sources
Caldwell Heritage Museum, History of Caldwell County (by John O. Hawkins); Fort Defiance, History of Fort Defiance; William S. Powell, ed., Encyclopedia of North Carolina History (Chapel Hill, 2006).
Just north of Lenoir, NC off of NC Highway 268. Please contact listing agent for showings.