"Belmont Hall".
On Smith’s Creek, ten miles north of Harrisonburg, Virginia on east side of Route #11 about a mile from Highway.
In the 1830’s.
"Belmont Hall" is two storied, built of brick laid in Flemish bond and has a gabled room covered with
metal.
There are two brick chimneys, one at both ends, and eight windows and two doors at the front. The porch is one story with a flat roof and four columns.
The hall is wide with a colonial stairway. Large airy rooms are at the sides of the halls upstairs and downstairs.
Upstairs a door opens from the hall onto the roof of the porch.
See Form #3686, attached.
The originator of this estate seems to have been Jacob Woodley, (sometimes spelled Woodlee) by surveys. The first surveys to him in our Rockingham Records are found in survey Book, 0-I for six hundred and thirty seven acres—June 3, 1769; October 31, 2024 and November 2, 1770, all of which at that time were in Augusta County. The surveys were made by Thomas Lewis and his assistant, and located on Smith’s Creek. He was a large landowner and had other lands besides the surveys here mentioned and before their dates. John Harrison, Jr. and Daniel Smith processioned for him in 1756. He was among the early settlers on smith’s Creek and had probably come in from Eastern Virginia. In 1776 he was processioner with Reuben Harrison and a road overseer in 1776, and the following year is mentioned as a constable. His land lay to the east of the "Great Road" in the region of Tenth Legion and is today identified by the old cemetery at the curve of the road leading from the village towards the Massanuttens'.
By purchase and otherwise, portions of this estate became the property of John Cowan in 1816, and in turn by his son, Jacob, by inheritance in 1863. Just when the present house was built is not definitely known. It is said to have been built by John Cowan in the 1830’s. It is a nice old home and is now occupied by Homer O. Long, and his sister, Mrs. …Lincoln.
Photograph.
"Belmont Hall"
Page 2
Rockingham County Court Records.
Settlers in the Long Grey Trail by Houston Harrison.
November 6, 1936 Geo. W. Fetzer
Harrisonburg, VA