J.W.R.Moore Historic Home

J.W.R.Moore Historic Home

About

The J.W.R. Moore House in the Shenandoah County town of Mount Jackson is a notable rural example of the Italianate style in the lower Shenandoah Valley. The large, L-shaped, brick house was constructed in 1871 by John Warren Rice Moore, a member of a prominent valley family and a successful farmer and businessman, and his wife, Henrietta. It displays distinct characteristics of the Italianate style: tall, narrow windows with elaborate crowns; widely overhanging eaves with decorative brackets; and on the roof a large belvedere with a tall finial. The construction history of the house is unusually well documented. Several of the principal craftsmen who worked on it are identified in a newspaper article written at the time of construction: the contractor and architect was R. S. Jones; the mason, Thomas J. Burk; and the carpenter, Isaac Sheetz. Moore had served in the Confederate army during the Civil War, and he and his family operated a successful farm on the nearly 400-acre farm until 1882, when they sold it and moved out of the state. The J.W.R. Moore House has been rehabilitated for use again as a single-family residence.

Details

Shenandoah County
Historic Site
5588 Main St
Mount Jackson, VA 22842

 

In the Area

Truban Archives
514 Stoney Creek Blvd.
Edinburg
Mount Jackson Museum and Visitor Center
5901 Main Street
Mount Jackson