Thomas Cassin Jr. House

The Thomas Cassin Jr. House is a farmhouse built c. 1850 on land previously owned by his father, Thomas Cassin. Thomas Jr. farmed the land, which contained a 200 tree apple orchard and 100 tree peach orchard.
The Hudson Family owned the property around 1850. The current house was likely built by Andrew Hudson at that time. Andrew Hudson was a former indentured apprentice through the County House of Employment. He moved on to the property with his wife, four daughters, mother in law, and a boarder. His daughter Isabella would later go on to marry Samuel Newlin Hill, a former owner of the Newlin Grist Mill.
The property passed to J.A. Couborn in 1892, and then to the Hutton Family in 1913. The Huttons operated a slaughterhouse business in the early to mid 1900s.
The Ingram Family owned the property in the 1970s.
This property is a private residence and not open to the public.
Concord Township Historic Resource #90