On the northeast corner of the lot stands the original brick slave
quarters, a rare survival of a once important urban building type, and
one of the best preserved examples in the country. Such buildings were
generally referred to as servants’ quarters or “negro houses.” A March
1860 deed cited the John D. Bellamy “kitchen or negro house” at the
corner of the Bellamy property. The neatly but plainly finished brick
building typifies urban slave quarters in the late antebellum South—one
room deep and three rooms wide, with stepped parapets rising above the
roof and a windowless back wall along the property line.
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