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![[photo] [photo]](buildings/GRE.jpg)
Green Hills Farm
Photograph by Sue Pridemore ![[photo] [photo]](buildings/GRE2.jpg)
Pearl S. Buck
Photograph from National Register collection
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Green Hills
farm consists of a complex of buildings constructed over
the past 200 years on approximately 58 acres. The property
has been designated a National Historic Landmark for its
association with noted author Pearl S. Buck, Buck purchased
the farm in 1933 and made it her home until her death
in 1973. The house's solid stone and 1835 age, she later
said, symbolized for her strength and durability. The
oldest building on the property is a one-story stone summer
kitchen that was purportedly constructed before the American
Revolution. Constructed of coursed fieldstone, the house
is four bays wide and two deep with the main entrance
located in the second bay. Two gable dormers are located
on the front and rear slope of the roof. Chimneys are
located on each gable end. When Mrs. Buck purchased the
farmstead, she made extensive alternations and additions
to the 19th-century farmhouse, including a two-story fieldstone
wing added to the east gable. The author of more than
85 books and winner of the Nobel and Pulitzer prizes in
literature, Buck gained fame for her books on China, notably
The Good Earth, which chronicled the fictional life of
the farmer Wang Lung against the backdrop of 20th-century
turmoil and revolution in China. At the time of her death
the American literary establishment had consigned her
work to a middle brow rank in the history of American
literature, and while she was popularly acclaimed she
received critical rejection from college textbooks and
anthologies until sometime after her death. The stone
farmhouse and outbuildings are currently used as the center
for the Pearl S. Buck Foundation. The house is maintained
as a museum and is open to the public.
The Pearl S. Buck House is located southwest of
Dublin at 520 Dublin Rd., in Hilltown Township, Bucks
County. Tours are offered of the home Tuesday-Saturday
at 11:00am, 1:00pm and 2:00pm, and on Sundays at 1:00pm
and 2:00pm. Closed on Mondays and major holidays. There
is a fee. Please call 1-800-220-2825 ext. 170 or visit
the website
for further information. Today, Green Hills Farm is
the headquarters of the Pearl S. Buck International
(PSBI), a non-sectarian development and humanitarian
assistance organization dedicated to improving the quality
of life and expanding opportunities for children, who,
as a result of the circumstances of their birth, have
been denied access to educational, social, economic
and civil rights. |