Revolution-Era Farm

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Explore the life of an 18th-century farming family

Just beyond the encampment, the Revolution-era farm evokes the world of the 18th-century family of Edward Moss (c.1757-1786), whose life is well-documented in York County, Virginia, records. Moss and his wife, Martha Garrow, had four children. Though not a landowner, he leased 200 acres from a wealthy cousin. At the time of his death, he owned six enslaved men, women and children. The story of Edward Moss and his family provides historical interpreters a frame of reference for talking about farm and domestic life as well as the lives of enslaved African Americans during the American Revolution period.

Here, hens wander amid the farmhouse, featuring a brick chimney on each end. The modest house has two first-floor rooms, a hall and parlor, each with paned-glass windows, and a second floor for storage and sleeping. Historical interpreters can explain what a house like this tells us about the family’s status.

Close by, in a separate log kitchen, visitors can learn about period dishes and see ingredients, some imported and some grown in the nearby kitchen garden. Historical interpreters cook over an open hearth and show how vegetables and herbs were harvested and stored for future use.

A distinctive feature of the farm is a building to represent quarters for enslaved people who helped work on the farm, adjacent to a swept yard and small garden. Like the kitchen, it is constructed of log walls and wood clapboard roof and equipped with a fireplace, stick and mud chimney, as well as a storage pit common in this type of dwelling.

Revolution-era crops

The farm includes a fruit tree orchard and a field for growing wheat, corn, tobacco, flax and cotton – crops Edward Moss would have sold for cash and used for food, animal fodder and making cloth. In a tobacco barn next to the field, visitors can learn about the 18th-month process of growing tobacco, from planting seeds to making a profit. Historical interpreters demonstrate tools used for woodworking and processing raw flax and cotton into fiber for thread and display examples of 18th-century fabric dye.

There’s more to see and learn at the American Revolution Museum at Yorktown and Jamestown Settlement. Uncover the way of life in the era of the revolution.

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