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Cray House (Stevensville, Maryland)

Cray House
Stevensville, Maryland (08-2007) 18.jpg
House in 2007
Cray House (Stevensville, Maryland) is located in Maryland
Cray House (Stevensville, Maryland)
Cray House (Stevensville, Maryland) is located in the US
Cray House (Stevensville, Maryland)
Location 109 Cockey Lane, Stevensville, MD, USA
Nearest city Stevensville
Coordinates 38°58′53.43″N 76°18′56.38″W / 38.9815083°N 76.3156611°W / 38.9815083; -76.3156611Coordinates: 38°58′53.43″N 76°18′56.38″W / 38.9815083°N 76.3156611°W / 38.9815083; -76.3156611
Area less than one acre
Built 1809 (1809)
Architectural style Post & Plank Log Cabin
NRHP reference # 83002960
Added to NRHP May 9, 1983

The Cray House is a two-room house in Stevensville, Maryland. Built around 1809, it is a rare surviving example of post-and-plank construction, and of a build of small house which once dominated the local landscape. For these reasons it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.

The house was constructed in two stages, with the earliest portion dating to around 1809. The land upon which it stands was once called Steven's Adventure, after Francis Stevens, to whom title was granted in 1694. The first section to be built, using an unusual sort of post-and-plank method, was a three-bay, ​1 12-story house. Later, a frame addition was made to the south end, also containing three bays. At this time the original roof was replaced by a gambrel roof, which ran the entire length of the house. The resulting structure is quite similar to a house style that was once relatively common during the late 18th and early 19th century in Queen Anne's County, Maryland.

The house was auctioned publicly in 1914; its namesake, widow Nora Cray, later lived there with her nine children. In 1975 her heirs donated the house, and its lot, to the Kent Island Heritage Society, which group have restored and furnished it and opened it to the public.

The earlier section of house remains fairly ordered; a central door on each facade is flanked by six-over-six-pane windows. The north gable end is a blank wall, and the chimney is "paneled", with its brickwork exposed up to the second floor. In these respects, the house is not unique, as several similar houses can still be found countywide. The modest size of the original house, too, is very much in keeping with other houses of its age from the surrounding area; such buildings were common in Tidewater Maryland well into the nineteenth century. Less common is the post-and-plank construction of the earliest portion of the house, unusual in Tidewater Maryland, and examples such as this, where the planks run from corner to corner, were virtually unknown before this example was found.


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