Rowan Oak, also known as William Faulkner House, is William Faulkner's former home in Oxford, Mississippi. It is a primitive Greek Revival house built in the 1840s by Robert Sheegog. Faulkner purchased the house when it was in disrepair in the 1930s and did many of the renovations himself. Other renovations were done in the 1950s. The house sits on 4 landscaped and twenty nine acres of largely wooded property known as Bailey's Woods. One of its more famous features is the outline of Faulkner's Pulitzer-prize winning novel A Fable, penciled in graphite and red on the plaster wall of his study. Though the "rowan oak" is a mythical tree, the grounds and surrounding woods of Rowan Oak contain hundreds of species of native Mississippi plants, most of which date back to antebellum times. The alley of cedars that lines the driveway was common in the 19th century. The studs of the house are 4"x4" square cypress; they were hand-hewn. Faulkner drew much inspiration for his treatment of multi-layered Time from Rowan Oak, where past and future seemed to inhabit the present. - Source: Wikipedia
- News
- Policy
-
Commentary
- Commentary Main
- Corrections
- Editorials
- Letters
- Cheryl K. Chumley
- Kelly Sadler
- Jed Babbin
- Tom Basile
- Tim Constantine
- Joseph Curl
- Joseph R. DeTrani
- Don Feder
- Billy Hallowell
- Daniel N. Hoffman
- David Keene
- Robert Knight
- Gene Marks
- Clifford D. May
- Michael McKenna
- Stephen Moore
- Tim Murtaugh
- Peter Navarro
- Everett Piper
- Cal Thomas
- Scott Walker
- Miles Yu
- Black Voices
- Books
- Cartoons
- To the Republic
- Sports
- Sponsored
- Events
-
Video/Podcasts
- Corrections
- All Videos
- All Podcasts
- The Front Page
- Threat Status
- Politically Unstable
- The Sitdown with Alex Swoyer
- Bold & Blunt
- The Higher Ground
- Court Watch
- Victory Over Communism
- District of Sports
- Capitol Hill Show
- The Unregulated Podcast
- ForAmerica
- Washington Times Weekly
- God, Country & American Story
- Games
-
- Subscribe
- Sign In