Cabiness-Hunt House

The Cabiness-Hunt House near Round Oak, Georgia was built in c.1810.

[1] It was built by George Cabiness, an American Revolutionary War soldier, or by his son Harrison, soon after they migrated to Georgia.

The house was deemed "outstanding as an example representative of early rural Georgia architecture and especially significant when set in its historical context of being built c.1810, only a few years after the land had been ceded by the Indians."

It is also significant architecturally for its merging of two structures, for its round-headed fireplace openings, and for the diamond-shaped pattern formed by glazed bricks on its chimney.

This article about a property in Georgia on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.