Rose Hill Farmstead
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Rose Hill Farmstead, also known as the Rose—Wise—Patterson Farm, was a historic home and farm located near
Vincennes Vincennes (, ) is a commune in the Val-de-Marne department in the eastern suburbs of Paris, France. It is located from the centre of Paris. It is next to but does not include the Château de Vincennes and Bois de Vincennes, which are attache ...
in Palmyra Township,
Knox County, Indiana Knox County is a county in the U.S. state of Indiana in the United States. The oldest county in Indiana, it was one of two original counties created in the Northwest Territory in 1790, alongside, St. Clair County, Illinois. Knox County was gradu ...
. The original farmhouse as built in 1807 by Martin Rose. This house was replaced in 1827 by a two-story, Federal architecture, Federal style brick I-house which was built by Rose's son, Matthias Rose. It had a rear ell added in 1829 and was remodeled about 1890. Also on the property were a contributing silo, summer kitchen, two barns, garage chicken coop, and tool or storage shed. ''Note:'' This includes and Accompanying photographs. It has been demolished. The property was originally part of 400 acres that was granted to Jean Baptiste St. Aubin by the U.S. Congress for his support of the American Revolution. St. Aubin assigned his rights to the property to Peyton Short of Woodford County, Kentucky. Short would sell the property to Martin Rose in 1807. The farmstead grew to 800 acres when Rose bought an additional 400 acres from future U.S. President William Henry Harrison. A small fort, known as Rose's Fort, was built around one of the property's springs during the War of 1812 but it was never attacked. After the death of Rose the property passed to his son Matthias in 1828. Unfortunately, Matthias died in 1834 and the house and a portion of the property was sold to his sister Malinda and her husband, Henry K. Wise. Mr. Wise was an abolitionist and the house became a stop on the Underground Railroad. When the Wises died the property passed to their daughter Nancy and her husband Robert B. Patterson. Their son, George Martin Patterson, would later attend Vincennes University and become a founder of Sigma Pi fraternity in 1897. When George died in 1960 he left the property to his daughters Marion Beard and Martha Parks. Marion lived in the house until her death in 1988. She bequeathed the house and many of the family's belongings to the fraternity. In 1992, the Sigma Pi Educational Foundation bought the property from the fraternity and established a memorial to the Patterson family on it. The foundation planned to move its offices to the building and establish an alumni center on the property. The property could be seen from nearby Shadowwood, which served as the fraternity's headquarters from 1963 to 2003. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1995 and delisted in 2012.


References

Former National Register of Historic Places in Indiana Demolished buildings and structures in Indiana Farms on the National Register of Historic Places in Indiana Federal architecture in Indiana Houses completed in 1887 Buildings and structures in Knox County, Indiana National Register of Historic Places in Knox County, Indiana Sigma Pi {{KnoxCountyIN-NRHP-stub