Showing posts with label Italianate villa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Italianate villa. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Barboursville Plantation ruins 1814-1822 Barboursville, Virginia

Barboursville Plantation ruins built 1814-1822 located Barboursville, Virginia

As a tour guide at Homewood house circa 1801 the guides would go on excursions to other Historic sights.
Today we will be touring the famous Barboursville ruins located Barboursville, Virginia. Barboursville was one of the largest and finest residences in the region. The only building in Orange County known to have been designed by Thomas Jefferson, Barboursville was constructed between 1814 and 1822 in the late Federal style for Jefferson's friend James Barbour, Governor of Virginia (1812-1814), U.S. Senator, Secretary of War, and Ambassador to the Court of St. James.

Jefferson's drawings called for a dwelling with a recessed portico on the north front and a three-part bay sheltered by a portico on the south front, with dome above--a scheme resembling Jefferson's own home Monticello. The dome, however, was not built. Even in its ruinous state, the house presents a romantic image of the Jeffersonian ideal, a compact but architecturally sophisticated classical villa in a carefully contrived landscape setting. The great oval in front of the house was originally a racetrack. The stabilized ruins are now the centerpiece of one of Virginia's first large-scale wineries. They also serve as an exceptional background for the Four County Players' presentations of "Shakespeare at the Ruins" on August weekends.



The scale of this house is quite large and grand. 

Jefferson’s design embodied a number of his renowned signatures -- the integration of the structure into an elevated knoll, the dome (not erected), and an octagonal room at the focal point of the wings of the house. Here, the octagon forms a core for the three stories of the house; from the main level it rises as one room, 2 stories high. The grandeur of this room, projecting from the south facade, lends such power and elegance to this monumental house


Approximately 8 miles south of James Madison’s Montpelier and 20 miles north of Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello in the same Southwest Mountain chain, parallelling the Blue Ridge, Barboursville was settled as a substantial plantation by Thomas Barbour, in the mid-1700s, occupying somewhat more than 5 times the estate’s present size of 900-plus acres.


The career of Barbour’s fourth son, James, cemented the rapport between these three leading families of the Virginia Piedmont -- as gentry and political allies in the nascent Republican Party, which Jefferson and Madison would lead into the White House, and James Barbour into the Virginia Governor’s Mansion, the U.S. Senate, and important Cabinet and diplomatic positions thereafter.


It was as President of the Albemarle Agricultural Society, as each man was in his time, that their character as farmers achieved even greater influence. But it was in their character as friends and neighbors, that the lives of these men are so palpable at Barboursville Vineyards, the remaining one of these 3 estates to sustain their leadership in agriculture, in a viticultural dimension which Jefferson foresaw and pursued with passion.


Though large in scale, the house contained only eight principal rooms, the hall, drawing room, and dining room being two-story chambers. The entrance façade featured a projecting Roman Doric tetrastyle portico which covered the recessed front wall of the entrance hall. On the garden front the walls of the octagonal drawing room projected into a similar portico, as at Monticello. The octagonal dome which Jefferson proposed in his drawing was omitted during construction; it is uncertain whether the Chinese latticework railing which appeared in Jefferson's drawing around the base of the roof was ever installed. Although the dining room had no chamber over it, Jefferson indicated a faux window on the second floor level in order to keep the garden front symmetrical. This feature was omitted and consequently gave that side of the house an unbalanced appearance. There is little evidence as to the appearance of the original interior architectural trim.




You can see the outline of where a mantel once stood  




A brick Flemish-bond mansion with a hipped roof, Barboursville stood two stories high over an English basement. After the fire, the family renovated a pair of brick dependencies to the west of the mansion. Today the estate is run as a vineyard.




Note the Flemish bond brick work used in the building, also known as Dutch bond, has throughout history been considered the most decorative bond and expensive brick work, and for this reason was used extensively for dwellings until the adoption of the cavity wall. It is created by alternately laying headers and stretchers in a single course. The next course is laid so that a header lies in the middle of the stretcher in the course below. This bond is two bricks thick. It is quite difficult to lay Flemish bond properly, since for best effect all the perpendiculars (vertical mortar joints) need to be vertically aligned. If only one face of a Flemish bond wall is exposed, one-third of the bricks are not visible, and hence may be of low visual quality. This is a better ratio than for English bond, Flemish bond's main rival for load-bearing walls.



Me and my friend Rosalie standing under 200 year old twenty feet plus high boxwood's 




Me and my friend Catherine standing under 200 year old twenty feet plus high boxwood's 


Barbour's estate has been known for its unusually large and fine boxwood, which flourish on the grounds immediately surrounding the main house. A portion of the gardens were once surrounded by a serpentine wall similar to those designed by Thomas Jefferson for the gardens at the University of Virginia.


Thursday, November 25, 2010

Walking around Historic Cambridge, Massachusetts

The Georgian style Longfellow National Historic Site built 1759. Look out for a up and coming post on this lovely home


Happy Thanksgiving!!! I have a wonderful walking tour not of Plymouth, Massachusetts, Where it is commonly believe that the first Thanksgiving happened in 1621. But of Historic Cambridge, Massachusetts. Cambridge of one of those lovely New England towns that one thinks of when thinking about traditional Thanksgiving. Cambridge a lovely city I visited in August of 2009 for five days during my 2 week stay in Boston. The well preserved city is rich in architecture from every area of American history. The city was named in honor of the University of Cambridge in England. Cambridge is home to two internationally prominent universities, Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Between 1790 and 1840, Cambridge began to grow rapidly, with the construction of two bridges, the first West Boston Bridge in 1792, that connected Cambridge directly to Boston, making it no longer necessary to travel eight miles (13 km) through the Boston Neck, Roxbury, and Brookline to cross the Charles River.



The new bridges and roads made what were formerly large rich estates and marshland into prime industrial and residential districts. In the mid-19th century, Cambridge was the center of a literary revolution when it gave the country a new identity through poetry and literature. Cambridge was home to the famous Fireside Poets—so called because their poems would often be read aloud by families in front of their evening fires. In their day, the Fireside Poets—Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, James Russell Lowell, and Oliver Wendell Holmes—were as popular and influential as rock stars are today.



The Georgian style Longfellow National Historic Site built 1759


Longfellow's beautiful garden


Bunny in Longfellow's beautiful garden  



Rose from Longfellow's beautiful garden



Longfellow's beautiful garden


Gothic Revival home


 A red brick Greek Revival building now turned into as Starbucks coffee


18th century building that George Washington stayed in at Harvard University




The 1844 Greek Revival villa Oliver Hastings house next to the Longfellow home




The 1844 Greek Revival villa Oliver Hastings house next to the Longfellow home






Turn of the century Colonial Revival home


Home with a Federal style doorway


Second Empire villa


Second Empire villa


Second Empire villa


Second Empire villa


A Federal style home


A nice Italianate villa


A nice Italianate villa


A nice Italianate home


Late Federal doorway with Greek Revival columns


A nice Italianate home


Nice blue door


Large Federal home


Delicate Federal doorway


Roses growing on a wood fence




Federal home


 This home is new but is a very good copy of a Federal period home


Federal home


Detail of Federal doorway


18th century Georgian Doorway


18th century Georgian building


Greek Revival home


1846 Greek Revival home