Warrenton sign Cherry Hill Peter Davis Tavern Historical Sign Peter Davis Tavern Magnolia Manor B&B Shady Oaks Lake-of-Woods
"Preserving the Past for the Future"

Preservation Warrenton's Upcoming Events:

2012 Spring Homes Tour

Architectural Reflections: Building Styles in Warren County, NC

Saturday, April 28th, 10am until 5pm and Sunday, April 29th 1-5pm

Ten homes and four churches on the tour in Warrenton and Warren County, NC

Tickets: Tour Advance Purchase $20; $25 the Day of the Tour

Tour and Lunch Advance Purchase (Saturday Only) $32.00 300 tickets available

Tickets Contact: Janet Coleman 252-257-4425
131 Haystack Drive, Warrenton, NC  27589 or email: jcoleman02@embarqmail.com

Tickets available in downtown Warrenton: The Chamber of Commerce, Friends Two and The Scarlet Rooster

The Jacob Holt House will be open both days for tickets sales and will host the Heritage Quilters show: “Three Men and Their Quilts”

Past Events:

Special Partners' Event: Saturday, September 11, 2010

The Board of Directors of Preservation Warrenton, Inc. hosted its "Partners in Preservation" at a Reception in their honor, held at Whitsome (The Coleman-White-Jones House, Circa 1820's) 305 East Halifax Street, Warrenton, NC on Saturday, September 11, 2010 at 5 o'clock. Refreshments of wine and heavy hors d'oeuvres were served, followed by special guest speaker, Willie Nelms, ("Road Scholar") who presented "America's Music Down to its Roots".

Whitsome Roads Scholar Willie Nelms presents his ROOTS MUSIC program  Partners Event Co-Chair Dawn Coleman with PW Partners Alan Kimball with Whitsome owner, Alice White McVey PW President Harriet Banzet and husband Jules chat with PW Partners Liza Burton and her guest, both from Greensboro Diane Davis (Henderson), John Garrett (Chapel Hill), Marvin Newsome (Littleton), and Patrica and Spencer Scott (Warrenton)

 The evening was a very entertaining one at a lovely, historic venue.  If you are not yet a "Partner in Preservation", please find out how you can become a Partner. Your participation will help Preservation Warrenton in its mission of "Preserving the Past for the Future" and we appreciate your kind support!

See below for a brief history of Warrenton and see here for a full screen interactive map of the 2010 Homes Tour. The tour was a great success and Preservation Warrenton would like to thank everyone who attended.

Warrenton, a National Register Historic District, was established in 1779 on 100 acres of land owned by Thomas Christmas. By the 1820s Warrenton had become the center of a prosperous plantation region. Tradesmen, professional men and the wealthy planters gave the county seat sophistication; while the county’s politically prominent lawyers lent it power. By the 1840s, and especially in the 1850s, it was a bustling trade center, thriving on the burgeoning wealth of the tobacco and cotton plantations of the Roanoke Valley. Builders and craftsmen from Prince Edward County, Virginia, came in the 1840s and produced a distinctive group of fine buildings. Jacob Holt was a master carpenter and Edward Rice and Francis Woodson were reputable masons. Initially they worked in the Greek Revival style of fluted Doric porch columns and intricately carved classical ornamentation. In the 1850s this basic form was enriched with bracketed rooflines, arched tracery windows, and more Italiante style ornamentation. Gamaliel Jones, later famous for his Murfreesboro buildings, had his start in Warren County. The architectural legacy of these men has been visibly preserved in Warren County homes and buildings. Preservation Warrenton, Inc., continues their mission, "Preserving the Past for the Future."