====== Thomas A. Huey Farm (BE 1033) ====== The Thomas A. Huey Farm is one of several [[East Bend]] [[farming|farms]] associated with the prominent Huey family. The land was purchased by Huey in a series of transactions from [[1834]] to [[1848]], and it remained in the family for a hundred years. Thomas A. Huey Farm One of several significant Gothic Revival dwellings along the [[Ohio River]], the Huey House is a one-and-a-half-story brick residence on the double-pile plan. The three-bay facade incorporates a central entrance with Greek Revival three-pane sidelights, capped by a transom with stylized Italianate brackets. Centered in the second story is a lancet-arched window with curvilinear Gothic Revival tracery. Behind the house is a brick tenant house said to have been built as a [[slavery|slave]] quarter. It is a rectangular brick structure with two openings in the main facade. An early-20th-century English barn of timber-frame construction and a hexagonal icehouse further enhance the property’s significance. A fieldstone wall with stone pillars extends along the road frontage. The farm sits on Big Bone-Union Road and was added to the [[National Register]] in 2000. ===== More Information ===== ===== Related websites ===== * National Register Information (PDFs), [[https://npgallery.nps.gov/NRHP/AssetDetail?assetID=cc58379d-a8dd-4901-a48a-bfe7a7c8e165|inventory form and photos]] ===== Related Topics ===== * [[Historic Homes]]