Bracebridge Hall is a historic plantation house and national historic district located near Macclesfield, Edgecombe County, North Carolina. The district encompasses eight contributing buildings, two contributing sites, and three contributing structures associated with the Bracebridge Hall plantation complex. The original house was built about 1830âÂÂ1832, and enlarged about 1835âÂÂ1840, 1880âÂÂ1881, and 1885. It is a two-story, five bay, weatherboarded frame dwelling with Greek Revival and Victorian style design elements. It features a one-story Doric order portico. Also on the property are the contributing Metal boiler/basin (c. 1880âÂÂ1900), Plantation Office (c. 1860âÂÂ1885), Servantsâ House (Aunt Pattie's House) (c. 1860âÂÂ1885), Tobacco Barn (c. 1920), Troughs (c. 1890âÂÂ1920), Large Barn (c. 1890âÂÂ1915), Barn (c. 1920), Overseer's House (c. 1860âÂÂ1885), Carr Cemetery (1820), and the Agricultural landscape. Buried in the cemetery is North Carolina Governor Elias Carr (1839-1900) and his wife Eleanor Kearny Carr (1840âÂÂ1912).
It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1971, with a boundary increase in 2005.