Point of Honor is an historic home, now a city museum, located in Lynchburg, Virginia.
[4] Its builder and designer, Dr. George Cabell, was a friend of Thomas Jefferson, and physician to Patrick Henry.
It was inherited by her father, Judge William Daniel (delegate to the Virginia general assembly 1798–1799).
")[6] David P. Payne bought the house in two acres of land in 1848, and in 1857 sold it back to Daniel, who sold it to Colonel Robert L. Owen Sr., who was President of the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad, and whose son Robert Latham Owen Jr. later became a United States Senator.
Owen died a financially ruined man in 1873, the same year the merged railroad went bankrupt, and the family mansion again changed hands.