Thank you guys
I've understood all posted
My primary residence has perimeter drain going to daylight
The lot in York will not permit that to happen
I was thinking a perimeter drain would not be needed as there would be crawl space but on second thought I'm guessing the idea is for the perimeter drains to get the water away from undermining the footings
How do you do a perimeter drain when you can't get to daylight?
Joel
I would site the foundation elevation such that you create a 1/2" per foot surface slope away from the house in all directions for at least 30 feet.
30' X .5"/ft = 15" So, if you are starting with a level site, where the frost wall emerges from the soil is 15" above the site grade. The bottom of the footer needs to end up 4' below that level, or (48"-15" = 33" below site grade level.)
Since the footer is 8" thick, a standard 4' high frost wall would have 23" exposed above grade. Your bottom row of siding laps over that by about an inch, so from siding to dirt would be 22". (8" footer + 48" wall) = 56" - 33" below site grade level = 23". Hope my math is right

23" is three steps up with a 7" stair riser height.
A daylight drain should be run with a 1/8" to 1/4" per foot slope. You are looking for some place that is 33" lower than the bottom of your footer. At 1/4" per foot, it takes 132' to drop 33". (33"/.25")
If you can't find that on the lot, I guess my next choice would be to run your drain pipe out 50" or so in the lowest direction and let it run into a pit full of rocks lined and covered with a couple layers of filter fabric before backfilling.
I would definitely put in foundation drains. You want the crawl space as dry as possible. Sump pumps are okay but not maintenance free and you have to pump the water somewhere.
It could be you put in drains and hardly any water ever comes out of them, it depends on the water table and surface drainage. If you avoid gutters, as all Mainer's should

, your roof will be draining into the ground next to your foundation anyways. You will not have a problem with that if you have good foundation drains.
Dave.