The James Webb House is a property in Triune, Tennessee that dates from c.1850 and that was listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in 1988.
When listed the property included two contributing buildings and one non-contributing structure on an area of 33 acres (13 ha).
[1] It is one of about thirty fine antebellum brick and frame residences in Williamson County that survive and that were built as centers of slave plantations.
It is among several "notable two-story frame residences" built in the eastern part of the county; another is the Samuel B. Lee House of Maplewood Farm.
This article about a property in Williamson County, Tennessee on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.