![]() ![]() The upper portions of both door pairs contain window panes, six in each of the eastern doors, and ten in each of the central doors. The eastern bay is narrower than the central bay. The eastern and central bays of this addition each contain a pair of large hinged wood panel doors, creating two unequal single-car bays. Like the main barn, the north eave-side directly fronts Pequotsepos Road. The west gable-end addition is parallel with the main barn and is attached gable-end to gable-end. The west eave-side of the cross-gable addition is also blank. The south gable-end first-story wall and gable-end are blank. The east eave-side contains a single wood-plank pass-through door beneath the cross-gable roof valley on the first-story. The south cross-gable-addition is built up on masonry block pillars, with an open crawl-space beneath. The exposed portion of the west-end and south-side, at the southwest corner, is blank. The south eave-side is completely covered by the south-cross-gable addition, and the west gable-end primarily covered by the west parallel addition. A vertical rectangular window opening is located above this run of windows, centered beneath the roof ridgeline on this gable-end. Within the east gable-attic is a horizontal run of five six-pane windows. No other openings are present on the façade. ![]() Each part contains six window panes in the upper portion. The main entry on this side consists of a nearly-centered oversize opening, containing a three-part panel door of wood construction. The primary façade of this barn is the north eave-side. This is the historic homestead of Captain George Denison, one of the founders of Stonington, and it has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The historic house on this property is located immediately to the northwest of the barn, across the street. Pequotsepos Road passes in front of this barn at an east to west angle. The primary façade of the main barn is the north eave-side, which directly fronts Pequotsepos Road. This prize-winning opus by Elizabeth White documents the multitude of descendants of Mayflower passenger John Howland through his first child, Desire (Howland) Gorham.This is a 1 ½-story eave-entry barn with a cross-gable addition on the south side, and a 1 ½-story parallel bank addition attached gable-end to gable-end to the west. Maps, illus, printed endsheets, 12,455 entry Every Name Index. By Elizabeth Pearson White, CG, FASG, FNGS. John Howland: Vol 1 - Descendants of Desire Howland Gorham - The First Five Generations Documented descendants through his first child Desire2 Howland and her husband Captain John Gorham.and Mercy Gorham (1659-1725)ĩ December 1726 Westerly, Washington County, Rhode Islandġ6 April 1693 Westerly, Washington County, Rhode Island, United Statesġ3 August 1737 Stonington, New London County, Connecticut, United States HERE LYETH YE BODY OF GEORGE DENISON YE SON OF CAPTAIN GEORGE DENISON WHO DECEST, DECBR YE 27 1711 IN YE 52 YEARE OF HIS AGE" Gravestone of Geo Denison at Denison Burial Ground, Westerly RI. Elizabeth, Mrs Christopher Champlini 1689 - 1749.George Denison III Son of George Denison & Ann Borodell, husband of Mercy Gorham before 1678 and father of: ![]()
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