About the Inn
Surrounded by vineyards and wineries, and located in the center of the Yadkin Valley Wine Region, step back in time and enjoy the tranquility of the Historic Rockford Inn Bed and Breakfast. Our Antebellum house (ca. 1848) situated at the crest of more than 6 rolling acres, will provide you with the simple pleasures and charm of country living while enjoying modern conveniences.
The Rockford Inn offers three distinctive guest rooms, "The Vineyard Suite", "The Mountain Laurel Room", and "The Blue Ridge Room". Take time to discover the architectural history of the Inn; its hand-planed ceilings, heart-pine floors, and hand-hewn logs that are exposed in the corner stairwell. Walk the grounds where century old oaks shade the knoll, where Chardonnay vines drape the meadow, and where a low fieldstone wall invoke memories of a simpler time. Enjoy the rich heritage and history of the Village of Rockford, established in 1789, where the fresco entitled, "Come Unto Me" adorns the 1914 Rockford Methodist Church.
Let The Rockford Inn be your "home away from home" where within 15-30 minutes you can enjoy the many offerings of Mount Airy, "Mayberry", the Andy Griffith Playhouse, and the Mount Airy Museum of Regional History. Visit Pilot Mountain, Historic Downtown Elkin, the Blue Ridge Parkway, or the Blue Ridge Music Center. Also in Winston-Salem, tour Old Salem, the Reynolda House or the Sawtooth Center for Visual Art.
Take advantage of the area's finest vineyards and wineries. Follow this link for operating hours of all of the wineries. http://www.allamericanwineries.com/nc/yvwt/YVWT-Hours-Matrix.pdf Recreational offerings include: golf at Silo Run, hiking, biking, horseback riding with Ogburn Stables or Bregman Pleasure Horses, ziplining and canoeing the Yadkin River.
The Rockford Inn is a member of the Mount Airy Chamber of Commerce, the Yadkin Valley Chamber of Commerce, the Yadkin County Chamber of Commerce.
History of the Rockford Inn
Hamlin-Burrus-Holyfield House
According to local tradition, John Hamlin built the original section of this house in the mid-nineteenth century. Hamlin's house was a two-story log structure with flush-boarded interior walls and a corner stair. It had a separate kitchen building. Hamlin operated a store and a tobacco factory in Rockford and had a farm nearby. He was married to Elizabeth Dillard and they had five children. In the late nineteenth or early twentieth century, George Martin Burrus (1844-1934) purchased the property and remodeled the house.
Burrus was a manufacturer of chewing tobacco and was married to Mary Dobson. He added a two-story frame wing to the front of the house and joined the one-story kitchen to the rear. A small porch with handsome chamfered posts was built along the ell formed by the joining of the original house with the front wing. Between the two sections is an open passage with a stair leading to the second floor. This simple but graceful stair is nearly identical to the one in the John Dobson House (SR 213) nearby and features a plain balustrade, a slender tapered newel, and a rounded ramped handrail. Stylistically, Burrus' alterations appear to be much older than the turn-of-the-century period.
Contributing to this impression are the open-passage stair, the nine-over-six sash windows, the flush-boarded front gable, the boxed and molded cornice with cornice returns, the flush-sheathed walls, the two-panel doors, and the chamfered posts of the porch. Perhaps Burrus attached part of another, earlier, house to the Hamlin house, or perhaps he was just extremely traditional in his building. More extensive physical investigation would be necessary to help determine how this interesting house evolved. Behind the house is a combination well house/smokehouse. A low fieldstone retaining wall wraps around the front and side yards, adding to the picturesque quality of the property. Since the 1930's, the house has been the home of the Hardin Glenn and Creola (Burrus) Holyfield family. (SR 220) - Article taken directly from Simple Treasures - The Architectural Legacy of Surry County by Laura A.W. Phillips
Family tree note:
Hardin Glenn and Creola Burrus Holyfield were Doug Holyfield's grandparents. George Martin Burrus was Creola's uncle.
The Rockford Inn offers three distinctive guest rooms, "The Vineyard Suite", "The Mountain Laurel Room", and "The Blue Ridge Room". Take time to discover the architectural history of the Inn; its hand-planed ceilings, heart-pine floors, and hand-hewn logs that are exposed in the corner stairwell. Walk the grounds where century old oaks shade the knoll, where Chardonnay vines drape the meadow, and where a low fieldstone wall invoke memories of a simpler time. Enjoy the rich heritage and history of the Village of Rockford, established in 1789, where the fresco entitled, "Come Unto Me" adorns the 1914 Rockford Methodist Church.
Let The Rockford Inn be your "home away from home" where within 15-30 minutes you can enjoy the many offerings of Mount Airy, "Mayberry", the Andy Griffith Playhouse, and the Mount Airy Museum of Regional History. Visit Pilot Mountain, Historic Downtown Elkin, the Blue Ridge Parkway, or the Blue Ridge Music Center. Also in Winston-Salem, tour Old Salem, the Reynolda House or the Sawtooth Center for Visual Art.
Take advantage of the area's finest vineyards and wineries. Follow this link for operating hours of all of the wineries. http://www.allamericanwineries.com/nc/yvwt/YVWT-Hours-Matrix.pdf Recreational offerings include: golf at Silo Run, hiking, biking, horseback riding with Ogburn Stables or Bregman Pleasure Horses, ziplining and canoeing the Yadkin River.
The Rockford Inn is a member of the Mount Airy Chamber of Commerce, the Yadkin Valley Chamber of Commerce, the Yadkin County Chamber of Commerce.
History of the Rockford Inn
Hamlin-Burrus-Holyfield House
According to local tradition, John Hamlin built the original section of this house in the mid-nineteenth century. Hamlin's house was a two-story log structure with flush-boarded interior walls and a corner stair. It had a separate kitchen building. Hamlin operated a store and a tobacco factory in Rockford and had a farm nearby. He was married to Elizabeth Dillard and they had five children. In the late nineteenth or early twentieth century, George Martin Burrus (1844-1934) purchased the property and remodeled the house.
Burrus was a manufacturer of chewing tobacco and was married to Mary Dobson. He added a two-story frame wing to the front of the house and joined the one-story kitchen to the rear. A small porch with handsome chamfered posts was built along the ell formed by the joining of the original house with the front wing. Between the two sections is an open passage with a stair leading to the second floor. This simple but graceful stair is nearly identical to the one in the John Dobson House (SR 213) nearby and features a plain balustrade, a slender tapered newel, and a rounded ramped handrail. Stylistically, Burrus' alterations appear to be much older than the turn-of-the-century period.
Contributing to this impression are the open-passage stair, the nine-over-six sash windows, the flush-boarded front gable, the boxed and molded cornice with cornice returns, the flush-sheathed walls, the two-panel doors, and the chamfered posts of the porch. Perhaps Burrus attached part of another, earlier, house to the Hamlin house, or perhaps he was just extremely traditional in his building. More extensive physical investigation would be necessary to help determine how this interesting house evolved. Behind the house is a combination well house/smokehouse. A low fieldstone retaining wall wraps around the front and side yards, adding to the picturesque quality of the property. Since the 1930's, the house has been the home of the Hardin Glenn and Creola (Burrus) Holyfield family. (SR 220) - Article taken directly from Simple Treasures - The Architectural Legacy of Surry County by Laura A.W. Phillips
Family tree note:
Hardin Glenn and Creola Burrus Holyfield were Doug Holyfield's grandparents. George Martin Burrus was Creola's uncle.