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Cupola House

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Cupola House  

For over two and a half centuries, the Cupola House has stood watch from the north shore of Edenton Bay.

Built in 1758 for Frances Corbin, an agent for Lord Granville, one of the eight Lords Proprietors. It was built in 1758 by Francis Corbin, land agent for John Carteret, Earl of Granville.  Gardens restored from 1769 Sauthier Map of Edenton.  Carteret was one of the last famous Lords Proprietors who, in the 17th century, acquired vast territories south of Virginia from King Charles II. Corbin died in 1767, and Dr. Samuel Dickinson purchased the house the following year. His descendants called the Cupola House home for over 141 years.


With limited income, the last of the family were unable to properly maintain the house. Weather and time eventually took its toll. The Cupola House’s once formal gardens were overgrown and neglected. Exterior paint was worn away, and the building was suffering from disrepair. Its loving, but impoverished, owners found no recourse but to sell off family treasures, such as the magnificent first floor Georgian woodworks. The house was threatened, and an historic landmark was near death.

National Historic Landmark

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Cupola House

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