Cuckoo (Mineral, Virginia)

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LocationJct. of US 33 and VA 522 S, near Mineral, Virginia
Coordinates37°57′11.51″N 77°53′59.69″W / 37.9531972°N 77.8999139°W / 37.9531972; -77.8999139
Area47.1 acres (19.1 ha)
Built1819
Cuckoo
Cuckoo in 2015
Cuckoo (Mineral, Virginia) is located in Virginia
Cuckoo (Mineral, Virginia)
Cuckoo (Mineral, Virginia) is located in the United States
Cuckoo (Mineral, Virginia)
LocationJct. of US 33 and VA 522 S, near Mineral, Virginia
Coordinates37°57′11.51″N 77°53′59.69″W / 37.9531972°N 77.8999139°W / 37.9531972; -77.8999139
Area47.1 acres (19.1 ha)
Built1819
ArchitectStanislaw J. Makielski (1938 addition)
Architectural styleColonial Revival, Federal
NRHP reference No.94000550[1]
VLR No.054-0016
Significant dates
Added to NRHPAugust 19, 1994
Designated VLRApril 20, 1994[2]

Cuckoo is a Federal-style house in the small community of Cuckoo, Virginia near Mineral, Virginia, built in 1819 for Henry Pendleton. Cuckoo was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on August 19, 1994.[1] The house is prominently sited on U.S. Route 33, which curves around the house. Cuckoo's interior retains Federal detailing alongside Colonial Revival elements from the early 20th century. The house is notable for its design, prominence and its association with the Pendleton family of doctors. The house was named after the Cuckoo Tavern, which had stood nearby since 1788. It has been in the Pendleton family since its construction.[3]

The initial construction featured a two-story front section with a one-story extension to the rear, housing the dining room and the winter kitchen. Between 1839 and 1907 the house was owned by Dr. Philip Barbour Pendleton, who added a second floor to the rear wing and extended the main roof to cover the new row of rooms across the back of the house. A later generation of Pendletons remodeled the house in the Colonial Revival style after 1910, adding the present Neoclassical portico. The next owners, Anne Pendleton Forrest and Dr. William Mentzel Forrest, added to the rear wing with a design by architect Stanislaw J. Makielski of Charlottesville. The complex includes a number of outbuildings, including two separate doctor's office buildings, a garage, a barn, a smokehouse, and the Pendleton family cemetery.[3]

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