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New Canton Cabin
A secluded two story cottage, with fireplace, this cabin dwelling originally stood in New Canton, Virginia. Once a drug store, bordello, and country jail complete with buckshot holes and blood stains in one of the logs it,too, has a touch of new with the old.
There’s a real old fashioned wood cook stove in the kitchen, where, if you are of the adventurous sort, could cook a pot of beans. It has a complete kitchen, washer/dryer, TV, living room, large bedroom upstairs with one queen and one full size bed, bath, and a front porch. Makes a great honeymoon cottage.
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Whisnant Cabin
This cozy, carefully restored, two story log cabin was owned by a Whisnant family in the Oak Hill section of Burke County, North Carolina and was used as a barn. Overlooking the swimming pool, it offers fun at the billiard table on the ground floor with a guest room and library upstairs. Completing this cabin is an exercise and fitness room for all guests to use
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Hinceman-Huffman Haus
A single-level board and batten efficiency apartment is named for Jim Huffman and Bob and Dan Hinceman, who were instrumental in the 1971 development of Reepco, Inc., the parent organization of Robardajen Woods Bed & Breakfast.
A short walk through the woods takes you to the riding ring...a wonderful place to get your walking in.
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General A.P. Hill Cabin
Relocated from the Chip Pottage family estate near Halifax, Virginia, it is named for a famous Confederate General, who operated in the area.
Comfortable amenities are offered in the snug 1830 log cabin with a loft bedroom that takes you back to a time gone by.
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This two and a half story log home was dismantled, log by log, carefully
numbering each piece so the cabin could be rebuilt exactly as it had stood for
almost 200 years in York County, South Carolina. It was originally built in the
1790's and you might say, built again in the 1970's. A large, sturdy farm home,
simple and unpretentious, pegs and hand hewn timbers marked the structure.
Today, parts of the other log structures have been incorporated.
With touches of brick, rock, and a striking blend of old and new, it has
become a hideaway in the woods.
Furnishings and building materials
represent family history and interest,
and was secured from the North to
the South. The intricately carved
front door was found in New
Orleans, The Black iron gate at the
entrance is from Connecticut.
Ceiling beams, and slate on the roof
and in both hearths, came from a
house in Virginia. Andirons came
from a hunting lodge in Maine where
Teddy Roosevelt used to frequent.
Matching end table with inlaid red
leather once sat in the newly
renovated South Carolina governors
mansion that was rebuilt after the
Civil War. The pine wall paneling is
from trees that once grew in Mrs.
Reep’s fathers front yard.
YORK HOUSE (Main Lodge)