Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { ?s ?p "Ingles Ferry is a historic farm in Radford, Virginia, USA. It is both a working, commercial farm and a historical preserve where living history interpreters depict life in the late 18th century.Ingles Ferry was developed as a farm and small plantation by William Ingles and his wife Mary Draper Ingles, pioneers in Virginia. They settled there a few years after Mary's escape from Shawnee captivity in 1755, the same year she and two sons were captured. They raised four more children: three daughters and a son John. Around 1762 William obtained a license to operate a ferry across the New River. Still owned by Ingles descendants and operated as a commercial farm, the property is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and protected as a state historic site."@en }
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- Ingles_Ferry abstract "Ingles Ferry is a historic farm in Radford, Virginia, USA. It is both a working, commercial farm and a historical preserve where living history interpreters depict life in the late 18th century.Ingles Ferry was developed as a farm and small plantation by William Ingles and his wife Mary Draper Ingles, pioneers in Virginia. They settled there a few years after Mary's escape from Shawnee captivity in 1755, the same year she and two sons were captured. They raised four more children: three daughters and a son John. Around 1762 William obtained a license to operate a ferry across the New River. Still owned by Ingles descendants and operated as a commercial farm, the property is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and protected as a state historic site.".
- Q6032601 abstract "Ingles Ferry is a historic farm in Radford, Virginia, USA. It is both a working, commercial farm and a historical preserve where living history interpreters depict life in the late 18th century.Ingles Ferry was developed as a farm and small plantation by William Ingles and his wife Mary Draper Ingles, pioneers in Virginia. They settled there a few years after Mary's escape from Shawnee captivity in 1755, the same year she and two sons were captured. They raised four more children: three daughters and a son John. Around 1762 William obtained a license to operate a ferry across the New River. Still owned by Ingles descendants and operated as a commercial farm, the property is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and protected as a state historic site.".