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The Woodlands and Bartram's Mansion
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Frank H. Taylor Illustration Collection
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Details
Creator
Taylor, Frank H. (Frank Hamilton), 1846-1927
Title
The Woodlands and Bartram's Mansion
Date
ca. 1922
Description
Contains two panels of country mansions. The top panel depicts a home with a neo-classical porch, identified as having been owned by Andrew Hamilton. The bottom panel depicts a home covered in ivy and surrounded by trees and identifired as having been built by John and Mary Bartram.
Notes
There was a time when the unpolluted tide-water Schuylkill River was bordered by fine country seats and the embowered road leading from the town down the George Gray's ferry was a populat drive. The two well-preserved examples of COlonial homes here shown are the Woodlands and Bartram's Mansion. The first-named was established by Andrew Hamilton, an eminent jurist, in 1735, devised to his son, Andrew, designer of the State House, in 1741, and then passed to a grandson, William, in 1747. The latter erected the existing mansion about the time of the Revolution. The property covered 356 acres. It was devoted to cemetery purposes in 1835. Bartram's Mansion and garden are now city property. The interesting stone house was built by John and Mary Bartram in 1731, and, in time, the botanist and his rare garden became famous. The children of the worthy couple maintained the garden beyond a century. It then became the property of Andrew Eastwick, whose large residence formerly stood nearby. The Bartram Association of Descendants meet, here, annually.
Taylor Catalog Number: 99
Is part of
Frank H. Taylor Collection
Identifier
Taylor - Case 3-8 [2717.F]
In Collections
Frank H. Taylor Illustration Collection
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