Lashawn Farm

The Lashawn Farm of Sofasi is located on Asian Island, on the middle of the island. The farm has great historical value and now is a tourist attraction.

History
It was build in 1873, the first farm to have been build in Lovia just after the first pioneers had reached Lovian soil. It was home to Sir John Lashawn and his his beloved wife Betty. As the years went by, both the farm and the Lashawn family grew, and many of the famous 'Founding Fathers' of Lovia would visit the farm. Regular meetings were held there, and King Arthur I of Lovia would often visit the Lashawns and have conversations with them. When Betty died in 1936, sir John asked a grandson and his wife (already in their fifties) to move in with him so that he would not be so lonely. When good sir John died in 1941, grandson Jim Petrovich and his wife Maria Petrovich would live on the farm until 1963 when they moved to a retirement home for the elderly. As the Petrovich couple remained childless, they gave up the farm despite the objections of other Lashawn heirs. It was handed over to the state of Lovia and made into a museum on the old days of the pioneers.