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Upon his death, Dr. Turpin bequeathed Salisbury to his daughter, Caroline and her husband, Dr. Edward Johnson. Mrs. Johnson, in turn, left the property to her sons, Edward and Philip Turpin Johnson. Edward Johnson graduated from West Point, as did his neighbor, Henry Heth, of adjoining 'Black Heath'. Confederate generals Edward Johnson and Henry Heth served gallantly during the Civil War. It was General Heth who touched off the Battle of Gettysburg. The present central section of the Salisbury Country Club has been designed along the lines of the original 'Salisbury' which stood nearby. This dormered story-and-a-half frame house burned around 1920. It boasted central halls, airy, spacious rooms, and porches shaded by a grove of giant trees, among them an ancient pecan, which stood until 1977. Salisbury's real fame lay then, as now, in its hospitality. |
