Chew House
436 East Barber Ave., Woodbury
The oldest part of this house is the story-and-a-half section at the west with a dormer window breaking the gabled roof line. It was built before 1800 and originally contained two rooms, one behind the other, each with a corner fireplace using a common chimney. The interesting wall construction indicates this was originally a log dwelling built with two-by-twelve inch hand-hewn logs of swamp cedar. (Private)
Deptford Free School Building
33 Delaware Street, Woodbury
The Quakers erected this building in 1774 as a one-story school. By 1820 a second story had been added. It is now the eastern-most section of City Hall. City of Woodbury
The Franklin House
44 North Broad Street, Woodbury
This one-time log cabin is the oldest house in Woodbury. Ca. 1765, it was owned by Joseph Low. The exterior logs remain intact, but have long since been covered with weather boards. The front door is original as are the exposed beams. One original fireplace still displays the square handmade bricks. (Private)
The General French House
136 South Broad Street, Woodbury
Built ca. 1766, this house gained fame during the Civil War because it was owned by a General in the Confederate Army. General Samuel Gibbs French, though born in Mullica Hill, chose to fight on the side of the Confederacy. (Private)
Hunter-Lawrence House
58 North Broad Street, Woodbury
Judge John Sparks built the Hunter-Lawrence house in 1765. The Reverend Andrew Hunter, a chaplain in the Revolutionary Army, owned it in 1792, and six years later it became the home of John Lawrence. Lawrence's younger brother, James, lived in the house and received his education in Woodbury. In 1813 James was fatally wounded on the deck of his ship. His dying words, "Don't give up the ship", have since become the watchword of the U.S. Navy. In 1924 the Gloucester County Historical Society purchased the building and has maintained it as an 18-room museum ever since. Gloucester County Historical Society
Low-Cowan House
On the southwest corner of Delaware and Horace Streets, Woodbury
This brick farmhouse was erected ca. 1770. It has since undergone some architectural changes inside, but the chimneys and gables and brick exterior bear proof of its age. (Private)
The Myrtle Grove House
138 Delaware Street, Woodbury
This house was built ca. 1803. The rooms are small and low-ceilinged. One fireplace an the northwest wall remains, as do original panes of glass in many of the windows. It has been owned by members of the Twells and Whitall families. (Private)
The Parish-Moore House
127 North Broad Street, Woodbury
Built in the early 19th century, this fine brick home boasts a symmetrical Georgian five-bay facade. The fireplaces in the front of the house are typical of the simple Georgian mantle designs of the Delaware Valley region in the late 18th century. (Private)
The Pillar-Barracks House
46-48 East Barber Avenue, Woodbury
The earliest reference on record of the Pillar, or "Barracks" house is dated 1806, but the east section is believed to be much older. The west section of the house was added in the early 1800's and a pillared portico was added to conceal the difference of the roof lines. (Private)
Presbyterian Church at Woodbury
Corner of South Broad Street and West Centre Street, Woodbury
Founded in 1721, this congregation built the present red brick Church in 1834. The original log structure, located in the Presbyterian Burial Ground on North Broad Street, Woodbury, was used until the Revolutionary War. In November 1777, it was occupied by British troops and afterward thought to be haunted. It fell into decay and a new church was erected a mile south, in the center of Woodbury, in 1834. Church
Red Bank Battlefield
On Delaware River northwest of Woodbury and near the junction of U.S. 295, U.S. 130, and N.J. 44
The Pennsylvania Council of Safety (Revolutionary War) erected Fort Mercer here to guard the river approach to Philadelphia from the British. The Hessians under Count von Donop attacked in 1777, but were defeated. County Board of Chosen Freeholders
Seven Stars Tavern
Southwest corner of State Highway 45, West Street, 2nd house from corner, Woodbury
This old building has been turned into apartments. It should not be confused with the Seven Stars Tavern in Salem County. (Private)
Tatum-Griscom House
On Rugby Place, in the east section of Woodbury
This old brick home was built in 1745. For many years during the 19th century it was occupied by David Griscom, one of Gloucester County's first nurserymen. Many of the trees, shrubs and rare bushes in this section of the city can trace their beginnings from Griscom's plantings. (Private)
Wilkin's Inn or Paul Hotel
Known in 1975 as the Bull's Head Inn, 111 North Broad Street, Woodbury
Tradition claims Wilkin's Inn was built with brick left over from erection of Friends' Meeting House. Earliest records of the inn are dated 1737. It is the oldest inn in Gloucester County that has been in continual operation. (Private)
Woodbury Friends Meeting House
North Broad Street, Woodbury
In the beginning (1686), the "Red Bank Meetings" were held on the Wood estate along Woodbury Creek near the Delaware. The present site was purchased for about three pounds in 1715. The west side was erected 1715, the east side in 1785. During the battle of Red Bank in 1777, the building was used as a hospital by the Hessians.
Source: Historical Sites of Gloucester County
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