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The Sloan–Parker House, also known as the Stone House, Parker Family Residence, or Richard Sloan House, [2] [3] is a late-18th-century stone residence near Junction, Hampshire County, in the U.S. state of West Virginia.
Oct 1, 2018 · In February 1624, when a community-by-community census was made of the colony’s inhabitants, at least 906 people were living within the settled area and another 371 colonists had died since April 1623. By January and February 1625 the number of living colonists had soared to 1,232.
The Sloan–Parker House, also known as the Stone House, Parker Family Residence, or Richard Sloan House, is a late-18th-century stone residence near Junction, Hampshire County, in the U.S. state of West Virginia.
Located on the Northwestern Turnpike (U.S. Route 50) near Junction, West Virginia west of Romney it has served as a stage coach stop as well as a private residence. The Stone House has been owned by two families: the Sloan family until 1854 when it was sold to the Parker brothers: John, Peyton, Benjamin, and William.
The Sloan–Parker House, also known as the Stone House, Parker Family Residence, or Richard Sloan House, is a late-18th-century stone residence near Junction, Hampshire County, in the U.S. state of West Virginia.
When James Slone was born in 1684, in Halifax, Halifax, Virginia, British Colonial America, his father, William Henry Hans Sloan, was 31 and his mother, Margaret Jane Hamilton, was 32. He married Doris Parker about 1703, in Halifax, Virginia, British Colonial America.
John Sloan was born in 1725, in Pittsylvania, Virginia, British Colonial America as the son of John Parker Sloan and Elizabeth Rose. He married Eleanor Sloan about 1740, in Virginia, British Colonial America. They were the parents of at least 2 sons and 3 daughters.