LEARN NC

K–12 teaching and learning · from the UNC School of Education

Classroom » Multimedia

About this photograph

Image credit

Date created
March 7, 2008
Location
Granite Quarry, North Carolina
License
This photograph copyright ©2008. All Rights Reserved

See this photograph in context

  • Colonial North Carolina: Colonial North Carolina from the establishment of the Carolina in 1663 to the eve of the American Revolution in 1763. Compares the original vision for the colony with the way it actually developed. Covers the people who settled North Carolina; the growth of institutions, trade, and slavery; the impact of colonization on American Indians; and significant events such as Culpeper's Rebellion, the Tuscarora War, and the French and Indian Wars. (Page 5.1)

Related media

Learn more

In the classroom

  • See our collection of articles on visual literacy for ideas on using photographs meaningfully in the classroom.
the Old Stone House

This stone house was built by Michael Braun in 1766. According to the Rowan Museum,

the site was virtual wilderness. The two-story Georgian house is indeed stately for its time with the stones on the front carefully shaped and matched, creating an impressive face to visitors. Climb to the second floor and you’ll discover high up in the end walls next to the chimneys, openings that some believed to be gun ports for fighting off hostile Indians (actually they were ventilation holes for bringing cool air onto the second floor).

Michael Braun was a German immigrant who arrived in Philadelphia in 1738 and lived in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, for about 20 years before moving his family to North Carolina. He later served as constable and a justice of the peace in Rowan County. He died in 1808, but his family occupied the house until 1904. (The Rowan County government has more information about Michael Braun and his house.)

The “Old Stone House” is located in Granite Quarry, North Carolina, just south of Salisbury. It is the oldest structure in Rowan County and one of only a few surviving stone houses from that time period in North Carolina. Restored several times in the twentieth century, most recently in 1966, it is now owned by the Rowan Museum.