Just a little history: The Purefoy-Chappell House is 185 years old
The history of the Purefoy-Chappell house in Wake Forest is closely associated with the history of Wake Forest College and the village of Forestville, which is now part of Wake Forest. The house still sits at the corner of South Main Street and Friendship Chapel Road, a stone’s toss from the oldest railroad in North Carolina. In 1837 Forestville was the area’s business-economic center, with several stores and the crossing of two major roads, Forestville Road, which then extended to Falls, and what was later called the Powell Road from the Neuse River northward along the ridge that previously was an Indian trail. The Raleigh & Gaston Railroad, the first chartered in North Carolina, had announced it would locate a depot at Forestville. The depot stood in the southwest quadrant where the dirt road crossed the tracks. Also, John Purefoy, who owned the plantation later called the Purefoy-Dunn House (which