This
farm was always referred to as "Cave Hill Farm"
because the cave was such a great place for good, clean
water right out of the ground. It never failed in the
early days of the farm.
It
has withstood slavery, droughts, and dust storms in
the early 1900s, financial stress in the 1930's and
numerous kinds of disease with the livestock and crops.
Hybrid seed, disease resistant crops, artificial breeding,
persistence and good management helped save the farm.
G.T. Hopkins, who bought the farm from his father-in-law,
was an innovator and entrepreneur. He started Rockingham
Springs which later became Massanutten Ski and Golf
Resort, started in 1970 by his great-grandson, John
L. Hopkins, III.
Cave
Hill Farm has been a grain farm, producing some of the
finest wheat for local use in nearby flour mills. It
had a 15-acre wine growing operation in the late 1800's.
In recent years, it has been a dairy and poultry farm,
producing products for local processors. John L. Hopkins,
John L. Hopkins, Jr. and John L. Hopkins, III were all
born and raised here.
The original house was log; very small and probably
stood near the cave for water. In 1830, an Englishman
was employed to build this manor house, which took three
years. The house has ten rooms plus the basement. The
original family cooked all the food in the large basement
fireplace and the family dinner was in the room off
the basement kitchen. The family only ate in the first
floor dining room if guests were coming. Most guests
stayed overnight - before modern transportation which
made traveling long distances slow.
The bricks in the house were made
from clay on the farm. The outer walls are 15 inches thick; the
inner walls are 12 inches thick. There are enough bricks in the
house to build thirty brick homes of today's style. The pine
timbers came from nearby mountains. |

 

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