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Amigos w/ Common Interests
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Meyer House Bed & Breakfast Sarah, my granddaughter works here cleaning rooms
The history of this beautiful and historically significant Victorian home begins with the founding of Davis, West Virginia, the town in which this home is located...
The boisterous lumber business of the late 1800's and early 1900's called Davis home. The high plateau consisted of extensive forests of spruce and hardwoods.
US Senator and industrialist, Henry Gassaway Davis, paid between $5 and $15 per acre for the land which is now the town of Davis.
Shortly after the land purchase, the construction of Meyer House began. Davis' plan was to have the house serve as a showplace for his numerous business ventures, as well as be the home of his extremely important 'second in command'.
Construction of this gracious Victorian home was completed in 1886, but the person to fill the role of 'second in command' proved hard to find.
After six years, Herman Meyer was hired for the job and he, accompanied by his wife and six children, moved in and made this house their home. For the next 70 years, generations of the Meyer family continued to reside in this grand Victorian home.
Meyer House is superbly constructed and is a prime example of American Victorian architecture. This icon of local history still serves its role of showplace with grace and dignity, as it did over the years for the Davis Empire.
The many spacious rooms and wonderfully detailed woodwork throughout the home add warmth to the late century charm of the surroundings. All of the wood used in construction of the home was timbered locally, including oak, red maple, and splendid red cherry.
No expense was spared in the construction of this home; even after the construction of this wonderful home was completed, a special bathtub was ordered and installed for the over six-foot tall frame of Herman Meyer. This bathtub, which was once the largest bathtub in the region, is still in place today. |
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