Hawk Gate Farm is a 352-acre estate, roughly square in shape, in the hills of South Pomfret. This storied landscape—once five independent farmsteads—embodies the evolution of rural New England from its earliest post-colonial roots to the present day. At its heart stands the Isaac Newton House, a c.1790 Federal-style brick Cape with preserved period detail. Features include finely crafted fireplace mantels, original window and door moldings, delicately beaded baseboards, a brick hearth with a beehive oven, historic staircase and plastered walls, wide-board flooring, and hand-forged hardware. Isaac Newton, one of Pomfret’s earliest settlers, built the home for his wife Betsey and their ten children and raised sheep. A two-bedroom Carriage House, designed in the vernacular of American barns, sits above a spring-fed, five-acre pond. Nearby, a rare high-drive dairy barn dating to circa 1900 still conveys Vermont’s early 20th-century dairy legacy with striking form and integrity. Together, these structures speak to more than two centuries of working farm life. The land itself embodies generations of thoughtful stewardship: open meadows, towering maples, birch groves, stone walls, and eight miles of carriage roads--including the King’s Highway, a grassy, stone-lined path believed to date to the 18th century. The farm is for recreation and produces maple syrup in its sugar house, has multiple barns, equipment sheds, and an apartment in the barn. Near Woodstock.
Active under contract
Listed by:
T Story Jenks,
LandVest, Inc/Woodstock 802-457-4977,
Dia Jenks,
LandVest, Inc/Woodstock
$6,100,000
37 Maxham Road, Pomfret, VT 05067
6beds
8,264sqft
Est.:
Single Family Residence
Built in 1790
352.61 Acres Lot
$-- Zestimate®
$738/sqft
$-- HOA
What's special
Spring-fed five-acre pondHigh-drive dairy barnFinely crafted fireplace mantelsStone wallsWide-board flooringHistoric staircasePreserved period detail
- 47 days |
- 9,253 |
- 603 |
- Loading