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HAMPSTEAD 



OME twenty miles northeast of Richmond, in New 

 Kent County, on the highlands overlooking the rich 

 fields which border the Pamunkey River, stands in 

 stately simplicity Hampstead. North of the house, 

 the hill slopes suddenly to the valley of the 

 Pamunkey, giving a magnificent view of the low- 

 lands framed by the distant hills. This view is suggestive of the 

 valley of the Medway, in the County of Kent, England. It was 

 for this county that New Kent, Virginia, was named. 



In the year 1827, Hampstead was built by Conrad Webb, 

 the owner of vast acres in that section of Virginia. It was told 

 by the oldest inhabitant, a descendant of one of his many slaves, 

 that upon the occasion of the laying of the corner-stone, the proud 

 owner, holding the hand of his young wife, walked three times 

 around the foundation and had her lay the first brick, using a silver 

 trowel provided for the ceremony. 



There they built the stately dwelling with its four stories, its 

 large, airy rooms, and wide, circular stairway. This stairway ex- 

 tends from the basement to the attic and is one of the most in- 

 teresting features of the house. 



The long and spacious hall, which runs through the house, is 

 broken midway by Corinthian pillars, supporting an arch, and the 

 woodwork throughout is carved to follow similar designs. 



The floors are of unusual quality for the period in which they 

 were laid, and it is said that in selecting the timbers for them 

 Mr. Webb made what was then a long and arduous trip to Norfolk, 

 to secure trees which had been cut and seasoned for masts. 



One part of the English basement originally had built-in book 

 . shelves and was used as a library. In this basement are also the 



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