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John Wright Stanly House
George Street, New Bern,
NC,
USA
Latitude & Longitude:
35° 6' 43.254",
-77° 2' 39.9624"
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North Carolina State Historical Marker |
Marker Text: "Home of Revolutionary War leader; and his son John, Congressman & state legislator. House moved and restored 1966-70 by the Tryon Palace Commission." The house of John Wright Stanly, entrepreneur and patriot, embodies historical significance and architectural grandeur. Although Stanly purchased land to build upon in 1779, it was not until 1787 that the residence was completed. Many consider the house in New Bern the finest example of late Georgian architecture in the state. Much like the man who built it, the Stanly House was important in both New Bern and North Carolina history. John Wright Stanly was born on December 18, 1742, in Charles City, Virginia. A successful merchant, Stanly became wealthy through maritime trade during the Revolutionary War and contributed large sums of money to the Patriot cause. After the war, Stanly turned to civil matters and was named first president of New Bern Academy. In 1789, both John and wife Ann Cogdell died of yellow fever, leaving the house to eldest son, John Stanly, who took legal possession in 1798 when he reached majority. During the time between Stanly’s death and his son’s acquisition of the house, it remained vacant. On George Washington’s southern tour, the president visited New Bern for two days in 1791, and was entertained at the Stanly house and at nearby Tryon Palace. John Stanly Jr., born in New Bern in 1774, was a prominent politician, serving terms in Congress and eventually as Speaker of the North Carolina House of Representatives. In recognition of his political contributions, Stanly County was named in his honor. Stanly is infamous for the murder of former North Carolina governor Richard Dobbs Spaight in a duel behind the Masonic lodge in New Bern on September 5, 1802. Spaight’s murder prompted North Carolina to pass legislation banning duels, although such acts of rivalry and honor were common until well after the Civil War. The house has connections to both sides of the Civil War. Confederate General Lewis A. Armistead was born in the house in 1819. While Union forces occupied New Bern, General Ambrose E. Burnside used the house as his military headquarters. From 1935 until 1965, the Stanly House served as New Bern’s public library, and was moved to its current location near Tryon Palace in 1966. It was opened to the public as a historic house museum in 1972. John Wright Stanly was buried in an unmarked grave in Christ Episcopal Church in New Bern, as were his wife and son References: Catherine W. Bishir and Michael T. Southern, A Guide to the Historic Architecture of Eastern North Carolina (1996) Jerry L. Cross, “John Wright Stanly House” (unpublished research report, Research Branch, North Carolina Office of Archives and History, 1987) http://www.tryonpalace.org/stanlyhouse.html Mary Stanly Hessel, Portrait of a Patriot: The Story of John Wright Stanly, Revolutionary War Privateer (1983) William S. Powell, ed., Dictionary of North Carolina Biograph, V, 426—sketch by Mary Stanly Hessel
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Related Themes: C.S.A., Confederate States of America, Confederacy, North Carolina Freemasons, Masonic Lodges, N.C. Freemasonry See more markers related to North Carolina Freemasonry. View other North Carolina Civil War Historical Markers |
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John Wright Stanly House Historical Marker Location Map, New Bern, North Carolina
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