Key Facts
- MLS® #: PABU2116514
- Property ID: SIRC3228743
- Original Price: USD 1,495,000
- Property Type: Residential, Other
- Lot Size¹: 10 ac
- Year Built: 1805
- Bedrooms: 5
- Bathrooms: 3+2
- Parking Spaces: 7
- Listed By:
- Angie Haug
Property Description
Set within the rolling countryside of Bucks County, this one-of-a-kind converted stone barn offers a lifestyle that feels worlds away from the city—yet is easily accessible from New York, New Jersey, Philadelphia, and the Main Line. Surrounded by over 10 scenic acres in Buckingham Township’s Spring Valley Historic District, the home blends authentic architectural character with the relaxed luxury today’s buyers are searching for. Soaring ceilings, exposed beams, stone walls, skylights, and walls of glass create interiors filled with warmth, texture, and natural light. Designed for both everyday living and unforgettable weekends, the home offers expansive gathering spaces, quiet retreats, flexible guest accommodations, and seamless indoor-outdoor flow. The kitchen opens naturally to the sunroom, screened porch, and outdoor entertaining spaces, creating an atmosphere equally suited to intimate evenings or larger gatherings with family and friends. Outside, winding garden paths, restored stone walls, woodland views, and the gentle sounds of Watson Creek create an unmistakable sense of escape. A covered patio stretching the length of the home, summer kitchen, hot tub, curated gardens, and extensive landscape lighting transform the property into a private retreat throughout the seasons. Modern comforts include updated systems, whole-house generator, 7-zone heating, heated workshop space, replacement windows and doors, water treatment systems, and comprehensive security monitoring. Located just minutes from the acclaimed dining, shopping, galleries, and cultural destinations of New Hope and Doylestown, this extraordinary property offers a rare opportunity to experience the character, beauty, and lifestyle that continue to draw buyers to Bucks County from New York, New Jersey, and beyond.
Amenities
- 2 Fireplaces
- Acreage
- Cathedral Ceilings
- Enclosed Porch
- Fishing
- Granite Counter
- Hardwood Floors
- Hiking
- Historic
- Library
- Open Porch
- Patio
- Screen Room
- Spa/Hot Tub
- Vaulted Ceilings
- Walk-in Closet
- Water View
Listing Agents
- Angie Haug
O. 2155349368
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Location
2885 Mill Road , Doylestown, Pennsylvania, 18902 United States
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Forebay
2885 Mill Road
Buckingham Township, Bucks County, Pennsylvania
Spring Valley Historic District
Nestled within the pastoral landscape of Buckingham Township lies Forebay, a rare and remarkable historic residence whose origins date to the early years of the American Republic. Today the property stands as a beautifully preserved example of Bucks County’s agricultural and architectural heritage, located within the Spring Valley Historic District, a village recognized on the National Register of Historic Places for its historic significance and intact eighteenth- and nineteenth-century character.
Origins in Early Bucks County
The land upon which Forebay stands traces its roots to a 1733 land grant issued to Uriah Hughes, part of the fertile countryside that supported early farming and milling communities in central Bucks County.
During the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, this valley along Watson Creek developed into a small but important crossroads village serving the surrounding farms.
The settlement grew around the Spring Valley grist mill, constructed in the 1740s, which became the economic and social anchor of the area.
Farmers traveled from miles around to bring grain to the mill, and the village soon developed supporting businesses—blacksmiths, shops, taverns, and artisans—earning the name “Mechanics Valley.”
Within this agricultural setting, the barn that would later become Forebay was constructed circa 1805, serving as part of the working mill farm complex that included the mill, farmhouse, and supporting outbuildings.
The Pennsylvania Forebay Barn Tradition
Forebay represents a classic example of the Pennsylvania bank barn, an architectural form introduced by German, Welsh, and English farmers in the eighteenth century.
These barns were engineered for efficiency and durability. Built into a hillside, they allowed wagons to enter the upper level for threshing and grain storage while livestock were sheltered below. A defining feature is the forebay, an overhanging second floor that projects beyond the lower stone wall.
The forebay served several purposes:
•protecting stable doors and livestock from rain and snow
•creating sheltered workspace
•expanding storage capacity on the upper level
This distinctive overhang became a hallmark of Pennsylvania’s agricultural architecture and remains one of the most recognizable features of historic Bucks County farm landscapes.
From Working Barn to Residence
For more than a century the barn functioned as part of the local agricultural economy, housing livestock and storing harvests from the surrounding farmland.
In the mid-1950s, as Bucks County began transitioning from purely agricultural use to a region prized for its rural beauty and historic homes, the barn underwent a thoughtful transformation. The structure was converted into a residence by Dr. Leslie and Ruth Craver, with the work undertaken by Luther Nash, a respected Bucks County master builder known for his sensitivity to historic structures.
During this transformation the residence was given the name “Forebay,” a reference to the architectural form of the barn itself. The name was commemorated in the home’s Mercer tile hearth, preserving the property’s agricultural heritage even as its function evolved.
Later renovations in the 1980s enhanced the interior living spaces while maintaining the historic character and structure of the barn.
The Spring Valley Historic District
Forebay occupies an exceptional setting within the Spring Valley Historic District, formally added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.
Spring Valley developed in two phases:
•18th–early 19th century development along Mill Road associated with the mills and early farms
•mid-19th century growth along the Doylestown–Buckingham Road (now Route 202), bringing shops, taverns, and artisan businesses
The district today contains dozens of historic structures constructed primarily of stuccoed fieldst
Marketed By
Kurfiss Sotheby's International Realty
6038 Lower York Road
New Hope, Pennsylvania, 18938
United States
2157943227

