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History of Early American Landscape Design

Difference between revisions of "Pavilion"

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===Usage===
 
===Usage===
  
Anonymous, [n.d.], an advertisement for design  
+
* Anonymous, [n.d.], an advertisement for design and construction services for parks and gardens (quoted in Chase 1973: 37–39)  
and construction services for parks and gardens  
 
(quoted in Chase 1973: 37–39)  
 
  
“[A surveyor by the name of Theophilus Hardenbrook]  
+
: “[A surveyor by the name of Theophilus Hardenbrook] ‘Designs all sorts of Buildings, well suited to both town and country, Pavilions, Summer-Rooms, Seats for Gardens . . . also Water-houses for Parks . . . Eye Traps to represent a Building terminating a walk, or to hide some disagreeable Object, Rotundas, Colonades, Arcades, Studies in Parks or Gardens, Green Houses for the Preservation of Herbs.’”  
‘Designs all sorts of Buildings, well  
 
suited to both town and country, Pavilions, Sum-
 
mer-Rooms, Seats for Gardens . . . also Water-
 
houses for Parks . . . Eye Traps to represent a  
 
Building terminating a walk, or to hide some disagreeable  
 
Object, Rotundas, Colonades, Arcades,  
 
Studies in Parks or Gardens, Green Houses for the  
 
Preservation of Herbs.’”  
 
  
Raspberry, Thomas, 1758, describing yardage of
 
mosquito netting for a pavilion in Savannah, Ga.
 
(Colonial Williamsburg Foundation; hereafter
 
CWF)
 
  
“netted lawn for Pavillions or [M]usqito
+
* Raspberry, Thomas, 1758, describing yardage of mosquito netting for a pavilion in Savannah, Ga. (Colonial Williamsburg Foundation; hereafter CWF)
Netts—10 Yards each ps at 10d per Yd.
 
  
 +
: “netted lawn for Pavillions or [M]usqito Netts—10 Yards each ps at 10d per Yd.”
  
Carroll, Charles (of Annapolis), 1777,
 
  
describing Carroll Garden, Annapolis, Md.  
+
* Carroll, Charles (of Annapolis), 1777, describing Carroll Garden, Annapolis, Md. (Maryland Historical Society, A. E. Carroll Papers)  
(Maryland Historical Society, A. E. Carroll  
 
Papers)  
 
  
“I like my pavillions: they are rather small.”  
+
: “I like my pavillions: they are rather small.”  
  
Bartram, William, 1791, describing Indian village
 
south of Charlotia (1928: 250–51)
 
  
“We were received and entertained friendlily
+
* Bartram, William, 1791, describing Indian village south of Charlotia (1928: 250–51)
[sic] by the Indians, the chief of the village conducting
 
us to a grand, airy pavilion in the center of the village. It was four square; a range of pillars
 
or posts on each side supporting a canopy composed
 
of Palmetto leaves, woven or thatched
 
together, which shaded a level platform in the center,
 
that was ascended to from each side by two
 
steps or flights, each about twelve inches high, and
 
seven or eight feet in breadth, all covered with carpets
 
or mats, curiously woven, of split canes dyed
 
of various colours. Here being seated or reclining
 
ourselves, after smoaking tobacco, baskets of the
 
choicest fruits were brought and set before us.”
 
  
Latrobe, Benjamin Henry, 11 May 1805, in a letter
+
: “We were received and entertained friendlily [sic] by the Indians, the chief of the village conducting us to a grand, airy pavilion in the center of the village. It was four square; a range of pillars or posts on each side supporting a canopy composed of Palmetto leaves, woven or thatched together, which shaded a level platform in the center, that was ascended to from each side by two steps or flights, each about twelve inches high, and seven or eight feet in breadth, all covered with carpets or mats, curiously woven, of split canes dyed of various colours. Here being seated or reclining ourselves, after smoaking tobacco, baskets of the choicest fruits were brought and set before us.
to Thomas Jefferson, describing the White
 
House, Washington, D.C. (CWF)
 
  
“The upper floor of the Middle pavilions, level
 
with the surface of the ground on the North side,
 
and opening on it, must ultimately be destined for
 
coachhouses.”
 
  
Jefferson, Thomas, 23 February 1808, in a letter  
+
* Latrobe, Benjamin Henry, 11 May 1805, in a letter to Thomas Jefferson, describing the White House, Washington, D.C. (CWF)  
to Hugh Chisolm, describing Monticello, plantation
 
of Thomas Jefferson, Charlottesville, Va.  
 
(CWF)  
 
  
“I shall be anxious that the south pavilion be
+
: “The upper floor of the Middle pavilions, level with the surface of the ground on the North side, and opening on it, must ultimately be destined for coachhouses.”  
in readiness when I come home in April, because I
 
have as many trunks of books now arrived in
 
Monticello.”  
 
  
Caldwell, John Edwards, 1808, describing
 
Monticello, plantation of Thomas Jefferson, Charlottesville,
 
Va. (1951: 38)
 
  
“Through the antes of the house, from N. to S.
+
* Jefferson, Thomas, 23 February 1808, in a letter to Hugh Chisolm, describing Monticello, plantation of Thomas Jefferson, Charlottesville, Va. (CWF)
on the cellar floor, is a passage of 300 feet long,  
 
leading to two wings or ranges of building of one
 
story, that stand equi-distant from each end of the
 
house, and extend 120 feet eastwardly from the
 
passages, terminated by a pavillion of two stories
 
at the end of each.
 
  
Dennie, Joseph, December 1809, describing the  
+
: “I shall be anxious that the south pavilion be in readiness when I come home in April, because I have as many trunks of books now arrived in Monticello.
Woodlands, seat of William Hamilton, near
 
Philadelphia, Pa. (The Portfolio 2: 505)
 
  
“The building is of stone, and in the Doric
 
order; the north front is ornamented, in the centre,
 
by six Ionic pilasters, and on each side with a
 
pavilion; the south front by a magnificent portico,
 
twenty-four feet in height, supported by six stately
 
Tuscan columns.”
 
  
Paulding, James Kirke, 1816, describing Berkeley
+
* Caldwell, John Edwards, 1808, describing Monticello, plantation of Thomas Jefferson, Charlottesville, Va. (1951: 38)  
Springs, Va. (later W.Va.) (1817: 2:235)  
 
  
“There is a pavilion built over the spring,  
+
: “Through the antes of the house, from N. to S. on the cellar floor, is a passage of 300 feet long, leading to two wings or ranges of building of one story, that stand equi-distant from each end of the house, and extend 120 feet eastwardly from the passages, terminated by a pavillion of two stories at the end of each.”  
which is used for drinking, and two bath-houses
 
—one for either sex. The spring which supplies
 
the ladies’ bath is one of the finest I have ever
 
seen. It bursts from a fissure in the rock in the
 
form of a cone, much larger than the crown of a
 
hat, and, together with the others, forms a fine
 
stream, in some places six or eight yards wide.”  
 
  
Jefferson, Thomas, 9 September 1819, describing
 
Poplar Forest, property of Thomas Jefferson,
 
Bedford County, Va. (CWF)
 
  
“I wish you therefore to come with the three
+
* Dennie, Joseph, December 1809, describing the Woodlands, seat of William Hamilton, near Philadelphia, Pa. (The Portfolio 2: 505)
carpenters under you, as soon as they have done
 
what I directed, that is to say . . . to put in the  
 
sleepers of the north pavilion and secure all the
 
plank and stuff belonging to it.
 
  
Jefferson, Thomas, 22 June 1822, describing the  
+
: “The building is of stone, and in the Doric order; the north front is ornamented, in the centre, by six Ionic pilasters, and on each side with a pavilion; the south front by a magnificent portico, twenty-four feet in height, supported by six stately Tuscan columns.
University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va. (CWF)
 
  
“I am suspicious of some mistake in the ornaments
 
for the Pavilion No. 1 which must have
 
happened through looking at the same order in
 
the portico at Monticello that a note tells me of 30
 
(mettle?) heads but no ox skulls. Should there be
 
any sculls [sic] in the same frieze with human
 
heads. If there ought to I am sorry having cast in
 
(?) 12 human heads for that pavillion 1. In the
 
example by Nicholson from the Baths of Diocletian
 
no ox skull is shown or can I find it so in any
 
other work that I have looked at. In fact this mistake
 
of mine if it is one would extend to every
 
frieze of that order and example, and therefore I
 
see the (validity) of your opinion.”
 
  
Eppes, Francis, 23 June 1826, describing the University
+
* Paulding, James Kirke, 1816, describing Berkeley Springs, Va. (later W.Va.) (1817: 2:235)  
of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va. (CWF)  
 
  
“Knowing that all your pavilions at the University
+
: “There is a pavilion built over the spring, which is used for drinking, and two bath-houses —one for either sex. The spring which supplies the ladies’ bath is one of the finest I have ever seen. It bursts from a fissure in the rock in the form of a cone, much larger than the crown of a hat, and, together with the others, forms a fine stream, in some places six or eight yards wide.”  
have tin coverings, I write to learn whether
 
they have ever leaked, and if so what method or  
 
prevention has been used.”  
 
  
Smith, Margaret Bayard, 2 August 1828,
 
  
describing the University of Virginia, Charlottesville,  
+
* Jefferson, Thomas, 9 September 1819, describing Poplar Forest, property of Thomas Jefferson, Bedford County, Va. (CWF)  
Va. (1906: 225–56)  
 
  
“on two other sides running from north to  
+
: “I wish you therefore to come with the three carpenters under you, as soon as they have done what I directed, that is to say . . . to put in the sleepers of the north pavilion and secure all the plank and stuff belonging to it.”  
south are the Pavillions, or Professor’s houses, at
 
about 60 or 70 feet apart, connected by terraces,
 
beneath which are the dormitories, or lodging
 
sleeping rooms of the students. The terrace projects
 
about 8 feet beyond the rooms and is supported
 
on brick arches, forming beneath the
 
arches a paved walk, sheltered from the heat of  
 
summer and the storms of winter. A vast wide
 
lawn separates the two rows of pavillions and  
 
dormitories. . . . There are 12 Pavillions, each one
 
exhibiting the different orders of architecture and  
 
built after classic models, generally Grecian.”  
 
  
Thacher, James, 3 December 1830, “An Excursion
 
on the Hudson,” describing Hyde Park, seat
 
of Dr. David Hosack, on the Hudson River, N.Y.
 
(New England Farmer 9: 156)
 
  
“At the termination of these romantic walks
+
* Jefferson, Thomas, 22 June 1822, describing the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va. (CWF)
fanciful pavilions are erected, where visitors may
 
contemplate a captivating display of nature’s magnificence
 
in these regions of wonder.
 
  
Martineau, Harriet, 1834, describing Hyde
+
: “I am suspicious of some mistake in the ornaments for the Pavilion No. 1 which must have happened through looking at the same order in the portico at Monticello that a note tells me of 30 (mettle?) heads but no ox skulls. Should there be any sculls [sic] in the same frieze with human heads. If there ought to I am sorry having cast in (?) 12 human heads for that pavillion 1. In the example by Nicholson from the Baths of Diocletian no ox skull is shown or can I find it so in any other work that I have looked at. In fact this mistake of mine if it is one would extend to every frieze of that order and example, and therefore I see the (validity) of your opinion.”
Park, seat of Dr. David Hosack, on the Hudson
 
River, N.Y. (1838: 1:55)  
 
  
“Then crossing the road, after paying our
 
respects to his dairy of fine cows, we drove
 
through the orchard, and round Cape Horn, and
 
refreshed ourselves with the sweet river views on
 
our way home. There we sat in the pavilion, and
 
he told me much of De Witt Clinton, and showed
 
me his own Life of Clinton, a copy of which he
 
said should await me on my return to New-York.”
 
  
Downing, A. J., October 1847, describing Montgomery
+
* Eppes, Francis, 23 June 1826, describing the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va. (CWF)  
Place, country home of Mrs. Edward
 
(Louise) Livingston, Dutchess County, N.Y.  
 
(quoted in Haley 1988: 46, 47, 52)  
 
  
“Without going into any details of the interior,  
+
: “Knowing that all your pavilions at the University have tin coverings, I write to learn whether they have ever leaked, and if so what method or prevention has been used.
we may call attention to the unique effect of the
 
pavilion, thirty feet wide, which forms the north
 
wing of this house. It opens from the library and  
 
drawing-room by low windows. Its ribbed roof is
 
supported by a tasteful series of columns and
 
arches, in the style of an Italian arcade. As it is on
 
the north side of the dwelling, its position is
 
always cool in summer; and this coolness is still
 
farther increased by the abundant shade of tall old
 
trees, whose heads cast a pleasant gloom, while
 
their tall trunks allow the eye to feast on the rich
 
landscape spread around it.  
 
  
“At the distance of some hundred yards, we
 
find ourselves on the river shore, and on a pretty
 
jutting point of land stands a little rustic pavilion,
 
from which a much lower and wider view of the
 
landscape is again enjoyed. ...
 
  
“Passing under neat and tasteful archways of  
+
* Smith, Margaret Bayard, 2 August 1828, describing the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va. (1906: 225–56)
wirework, covered with rare climbers, we enter
 
what is properly
 
  
“THE FLOWER GARDEN.  
+
: “on two other sides running from north to south are the Pavillions, or Professor’s houses, at about 60 or 70 feet apart, connected by terraces, beneath which are the dormitories, or lodging sleeping rooms of the students. The terrace projects about 8 feet beyond the rooms and is supported on brick arches, forming beneath the arches a paved walk, sheltered from the heat of summer and the storms of winter. A vast wide lawn separates the two rows of pavillions and dormitories. . . . There are 12 Pavillions, each one exhibiting the different orders of architecture and built after classic models, generally Grecian.”
  
“In the centre of the garden stands a large vase
 
of the Warwick pattern; others occupy the centres
 
of parterres in the midst of its two main divisions,
 
and at either end is a fanciful light summer-house,
 
or pavilion, of Moresque character.”
 
  
Downing, A. J., 1850, describing a design for a
+
* Thacher, James, 3 December 1830, “An Excursion on the Hudson,” describing Hyde Park, seat of Dr. David Hosack, on the Hudson River, N.Y. (New England Farmer 9: 156)  
country house ([1850] 1968: 357)  
 
  
“[Referring to Design XXXII] On the right of  
+
: “At the termination of these romantic walks fanciful pavilions are erected, where visitors may contemplate a captivating display of nature’s magnificence in these regions of wonder.
this hall is a noble veranda, which, for want of a
 
better name, we call the pavilion. To a Southern
 
house, this would be the greatest necessity, besides
 
adding much to the architectural beauty of the
 
house—for, in fact, such a pavilion would be the
 
lounging place, conversazione, and often dining-
 
room itself, since it would be the coolest, airiest,
 
and most agreeable part of the house during a certain
 
part of the day. In summer, this pavilion, or
 
its shadow, would give a softened light to the dining
 
hall, while the large windows, thrown open to
 
the floor, between the two, would make the dining-
 
room fresh and pleasant in the most sultry days.
 
To vary the uses of the pavilion, we will only suggest
 
that the dinner being over, the dessert might
 
be served there, and the dessert being concluded,
 
gentlemen addicted to the soothing indulgence of
 
a fragrant ‘Havana,’ would find the pavilion the
 
best of smoking apartments, after the ladies had
 
retired to the drawing-room.  
 
  
“Even in the Middle states, the enjoyment of a
 
large pavilion of this kind is very great during
 
four months of the year. The only example that we
 
have seen of such an appendage to the house is at
 
Montgomery Place—one of the finest seat on the Hudson, where it is placed on the drawing-room
 
side of the house, and at once impresses every visitor
 
by its combination of beauty, dignity and utility.
 
In short, although this feature may be omitted,
 
without materially diminishing the beauty or convenience
 
of this design, its adoption would give a
 
completeness and significance to a first-rate
 
country-house like this; completeness, since it
 
affords something more than a veranda, viz. a
 
room in the open air, the greatest luxury in a warm
 
summer; significance, since it tells the story of a
 
desideratum growing out of our climate, architecturally
 
and fittingly supplied.” [Fig. 10]
 
  
Vedder, Sarah E., 1830–51, describing Custis-Lee
+
* Martineau, Harriet, 1834, describing Hyde Park, seat of Dr. David Hosack, on the Hudson River, N.Y. (1838: 1:55)  
Mansion (Arlington House), Arlington, Va.  
 
(Junior League of Washington 1977: 77)  
 
  
“Arlington . . . was daily visited by strangers,  
+
: “Then crossing the road, after paying our respects to his dairy of fine cows, we drove through the orchard, and round Cape Horn, and refreshed ourselves with the sweet river views on our way home. There we sat in the pavilion, and he told me much of De Witt Clinton, and showed me his own Life of Clinton, a copy of which he said should await me on my return to New-York.”
and many were the picnic parties enjoyed there in  
+
 
the lovely woods surrounding the mansion. . . .  
+
 
Mr. Custis had two or three pavillions built to  
+
* Downing, A. J., October 1847, describing Montgomery Place, country home of Mrs. Edward (Louise) Livingston, Dutchess County, N.Y. (quoted in Haley 1988: 46, 47, 52)
accommodate the parties, either to set the tables  
+
 
or to dance. Frequently he would come down to  
+
: “Without going into any details of the interior, we may call attention to the unique effect of the pavilion, thirty feet wide, which forms the north
the grounds and participate in their amusements.”  
+
wing of this house. It opens from the library and drawing-room by low windows. Its ribbed roof is supported by a tasteful series of columns and arches, in the style of an Italian arcade. As it is on the north side of the dwelling, its position is always cool in summer; and this coolness is still farther increased by the abundant shade of tall old trees, whose heads cast a pleasant gloom, while their tall trunks allow the eye to feast on the rich landscape spread around it.
 +
: “At the distance of some hundred yards, we find ourselves on the river shore, and on a pretty jutting point of land stands a little rustic pavilion, from which a much lower and wider view of the landscape is again enjoyed. ...
 +
: “Passing under neat and tasteful archways of wirework, covered with rare climbers, we enter what is properly
 +
: “THE FLOWER GARDEN.
 +
: “In the centre of the garden stands a large vase of the Warwick pattern; others occupy the centres of parterres in the midst of its two main divisions,and at either end is a fanciful light summer-house, or pavilion, of Moresque character.”
 +
 
 +
 
 +
* Downing, A. J., 1850, describing a design for a country house ([1850] 1968: 357)
 +
 
 +
: “[Referring to Design XXXII] On the right of this hall is a noble veranda, which, for want of a better name, we call the pavilion. To a Southern house, this would be the greatest necessity, besides adding much to the architectural beauty of the house—for, in fact, such a pavilion would be the lounging place, conversazione, and often dining-room itself, since it would be the coolest, airiest, and most agreeable part of the house during a certain part of the day. In summer, this pavilion, or its shadow, would give a softened light to the dining hall, while the large windows, thrown open to the floor, between the two, would make the dining-room fresh and pleasant in the most sultry days. To vary the uses of the pavilion, we will only suggest that the dinner being over, the dessert might be served there, and the dessert being concluded, gentlemen addicted to the soothing indulgence of a fragrant ‘Havana,’ would find the pavilion the best of smoking apartments, after the ladies had retired to the drawing-room.
 +
: “Even in the Middle states, the enjoyment of a large pavilion of this kind is very great during four months of the year. The only example that we have seen of such an appendage to the house is at Montgomery Place—one of the finest seat on the Hudson, where it is placed on the drawing-room side of the house, and at once impresses every visitor by its combination of beauty, dignity and utility. In short, although this feature may be omitted, without materially diminishing the beauty or convenience of this design, its adoption would give a completeness and significance to a first-rate country-house like this; completeness, since it affords something more than a veranda, viz. a room in the open air, the greatest luxury in a warm summer; significance, since it tells the story of a desideratum growing out of our climate, architecturally and fittingly supplied.” [Fig. 10]
 +
 
 +
 
 +
* Vedder, Sarah E., 1830–51, describing Custis-Lee Mansion (Arlington House), Arlington, Va. (Junior League of Washington 1977: 77)
 +
 
 +
: “Arlington . . . was daily visited by strangers, and many were the picnic parties enjoyed there in the lovely woods surrounding the mansion. . . . Mr. Custis had two or three pavillions built to accommodate the parties, either to set the tables or to dance. Frequently he would come down to the grounds and participate in their amusements.”
  
 
===Citations===
 
===Citations===

Revision as of 18:31, February 25, 2016

(Pavillion)
See also: Belvedere, Summerhouse, Temple

History

Pavilion was a term that appeared throughout the Eastern colonies and, later, the states from New England to the Deep South. Advertisements for garden services in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries included the pavilion in lists of structures for sale. Ephraim Chambers’s 1741–43 definition of a pavilion noted three standard meanings of the term as it was used during the colonial and early Republic periods. First, it referred to a tent-like or domed building under a single roof [Fig. 1]; second, it denoted a projecting piece in front of or on the corner of a building; and third, it described a garden building also known as a summerhouse, temple, or pleasure house. All three denotations have relevance in the history of the designed landscape.

Samuel Johnson’s 1755 definition suggested that a pavilion could be a moveable or temporary structure. This type of pavilion was also described in an early nineteenth-century account of structures built to accommodate socializing and dancing at Custis-Lee Mansion (Arlington House) in Arlington, Va. Alexander Jackson Davis in 1836 sketched a canopied pavilion for Blithe-wood [Fig. 2]. Its delicate appearance suggests that it might have been temporary. Pavilions, however, were more frequently permanent structures that were part of an architectural or landscape design.

In his design for the University of Virginia, Thomas Jefferson placed along the main lawn two rows of individual professor’s houses, which he identified as pavilions. These temple-like buildings, each ornamented with a different classical order, were linked by covered walkways or piazzas and backed by enclosed gardens. In this instance, the choice of the term with its garden overtones suggests that Jefferson conceived of the whole composition based on the interrelationship of architecture and landscape [Fig. 3]. At Monticello, Jefferson again planned temple-like structures that he called pavilions, which stood at the end of each of two symmetrical walkways that extended from the main house into the garden [Fig. 4]. His 1808 letter indicates that he planned to use at least one of these new pavilions as a library.

The application of the term “pavilion” to a structure that was attached to a house as a porch-like space seems to have gained popularity with the advent of house pattern books in the 1840s. “More than a veranda,” Downing wrote, the pavilion was “a room in the open air.” For the frontispiece of an issue of the Horticulturist, he used a drawing by Davis depicting the pavilion at Montgomery Place in Dutchess County, N.Y., through which the surrounding landscape was seen [Fig. 5]. In another view of the same estate, Davis depicted what was described in the accompanying article as two types of pavilions: an attached structure and a separate temple-like building in the garden [Fig. 6].

The garden pavilion was illustrated in Downing’s publications as a wooden structure made in a variety of light framework types. It had a single roof and generally provided shelter for a garden seat. Some pavilions were simple and rustic in appearance, with climbing plants and curved branches adding to their character [Fig. 7], while others offered a more finished treatment, such as circular or pedimental temples designed in the classical style [Fig. 8]. Downing’s advocacy of a “unity of expression” and his concern for the appropriateness of style is illustrated by his choice of a pavilion that corresponded in style to the garden and its architectural or topographical features.

Pavilions were often located at the terminus of a walk, the summit of a hill, or the edge of a garden to provide resting and viewing places. The plan for Calverton, near Baltimore [Fig. 9], is an example of a pleasure ground design that uses such criteria to determine the placement of pavilions within the landscape.

The term “pavilion” was often used interchangeably with “summerhouse” and “temple” (see Summerhouse and Temple). A regional preference is not discernable in the textual evidence for any of these terms. Only Noah Webster, in the later edition of An American Dictionary of the English Language (1848), suggested that the word “pavilion” was not appropriate for describing a summerhouse in a garden, without explanation. More commonly, pavilion was used broadly to encompass a variety of garden building types. Within one passage, Downing described one pavilion that formed the north wing of the house at Montgomery Place, and another separate garden temple as a “little rustic pavilion” located at the water’s edge. In either case, the function of the pavilion was to offer an open-air structure with a sheltering roof that was linked visually and spatially with the landscape. Downing (1850) used this particular feature to illustrate the “story of a desideratum growing out of our climate,” and the American adaptation in design to both northern and southern conditions.

-- Therese O'Malley

Texts

Usage

  • Anonymous, [n.d.], an advertisement for design and construction services for parks and gardens (quoted in Chase 1973: 37–39)
“[A surveyor by the name of Theophilus Hardenbrook] ‘Designs all sorts of Buildings, well suited to both town and country, Pavilions, Summer-Rooms, Seats for Gardens . . . also Water-houses for Parks . . . Eye Traps to represent a Building terminating a walk, or to hide some disagreeable Object, Rotundas, Colonades, Arcades, Studies in Parks or Gardens, Green Houses for the Preservation of Herbs.’”


  • Raspberry, Thomas, 1758, describing yardage of mosquito netting for a pavilion in Savannah, Ga. (Colonial Williamsburg Foundation; hereafter CWF)
“netted lawn for Pavillions or [M]usqito Netts—10 Yards each ps at 10d per Yd.”


  • Carroll, Charles (of Annapolis), 1777, describing Carroll Garden, Annapolis, Md. (Maryland Historical Society, A. E. Carroll Papers)
“I like my pavillions: they are rather small.”


  • Bartram, William, 1791, describing Indian village south of Charlotia (1928: 250–51)
“We were received and entertained friendlily [sic] by the Indians, the chief of the village conducting us to a grand, airy pavilion in the center of the village. It was four square; a range of pillars or posts on each side supporting a canopy composed of Palmetto leaves, woven or thatched together, which shaded a level platform in the center, that was ascended to from each side by two steps or flights, each about twelve inches high, and seven or eight feet in breadth, all covered with carpets or mats, curiously woven, of split canes dyed of various colours. Here being seated or reclining ourselves, after smoaking tobacco, baskets of the choicest fruits were brought and set before us.”


  • Latrobe, Benjamin Henry, 11 May 1805, in a letter to Thomas Jefferson, describing the White House, Washington, D.C. (CWF)
“The upper floor of the Middle pavilions, level with the surface of the ground on the North side, and opening on it, must ultimately be destined for coachhouses.”


  • Jefferson, Thomas, 23 February 1808, in a letter to Hugh Chisolm, describing Monticello, plantation of Thomas Jefferson, Charlottesville, Va. (CWF)
“I shall be anxious that the south pavilion be in readiness when I come home in April, because I have as many trunks of books now arrived in Monticello.”


  • Caldwell, John Edwards, 1808, describing Monticello, plantation of Thomas Jefferson, Charlottesville, Va. (1951: 38)
“Through the antes of the house, from N. to S. on the cellar floor, is a passage of 300 feet long, leading to two wings or ranges of building of one story, that stand equi-distant from each end of the house, and extend 120 feet eastwardly from the passages, terminated by a pavillion of two stories at the end of each.”


  • Dennie, Joseph, December 1809, describing the Woodlands, seat of William Hamilton, near Philadelphia, Pa. (The Portfolio 2: 505)
“The building is of stone, and in the Doric order; the north front is ornamented, in the centre, by six Ionic pilasters, and on each side with a pavilion; the south front by a magnificent portico, twenty-four feet in height, supported by six stately Tuscan columns.”


  • Paulding, James Kirke, 1816, describing Berkeley Springs, Va. (later W.Va.) (1817: 2:235)
“There is a pavilion built over the spring, which is used for drinking, and two bath-houses —one for either sex. The spring which supplies the ladies’ bath is one of the finest I have ever seen. It bursts from a fissure in the rock in the form of a cone, much larger than the crown of a hat, and, together with the others, forms a fine stream, in some places six or eight yards wide.”


  • Jefferson, Thomas, 9 September 1819, describing Poplar Forest, property of Thomas Jefferson, Bedford County, Va. (CWF)
“I wish you therefore to come with the three carpenters under you, as soon as they have done what I directed, that is to say . . . to put in the sleepers of the north pavilion and secure all the plank and stuff belonging to it.”


  • Jefferson, Thomas, 22 June 1822, describing the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va. (CWF)
“I am suspicious of some mistake in the ornaments for the Pavilion No. 1 which must have happened through looking at the same order in the portico at Monticello that a note tells me of 30 (mettle?) heads but no ox skulls. Should there be any sculls [sic] in the same frieze with human heads. If there ought to I am sorry having cast in (?) 12 human heads for that pavillion 1. In the example by Nicholson from the Baths of Diocletian no ox skull is shown or can I find it so in any other work that I have looked at. In fact this mistake of mine if it is one would extend to every frieze of that order and example, and therefore I see the (validity) of your opinion.”


  • Eppes, Francis, 23 June 1826, describing the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va. (CWF)
“Knowing that all your pavilions at the University have tin coverings, I write to learn whether they have ever leaked, and if so what method or prevention has been used.”


  • Smith, Margaret Bayard, 2 August 1828, describing the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va. (1906: 225–56)
“on two other sides running from north to south are the Pavillions, or Professor’s houses, at about 60 or 70 feet apart, connected by terraces, beneath which are the dormitories, or lodging sleeping rooms of the students. The terrace projects about 8 feet beyond the rooms and is supported on brick arches, forming beneath the arches a paved walk, sheltered from the heat of summer and the storms of winter. A vast wide lawn separates the two rows of pavillions and dormitories. . . . There are 12 Pavillions, each one exhibiting the different orders of architecture and built after classic models, generally Grecian.”


  • Thacher, James, 3 December 1830, “An Excursion on the Hudson,” describing Hyde Park, seat of Dr. David Hosack, on the Hudson River, N.Y. (New England Farmer 9: 156)
“At the termination of these romantic walks fanciful pavilions are erected, where visitors may contemplate a captivating display of nature’s magnificence in these regions of wonder.”


  • Martineau, Harriet, 1834, describing Hyde Park, seat of Dr. David Hosack, on the Hudson River, N.Y. (1838: 1:55)
“Then crossing the road, after paying our respects to his dairy of fine cows, we drove through the orchard, and round Cape Horn, and refreshed ourselves with the sweet river views on our way home. There we sat in the pavilion, and he told me much of De Witt Clinton, and showed me his own Life of Clinton, a copy of which he said should await me on my return to New-York.”


  • Downing, A. J., October 1847, describing Montgomery Place, country home of Mrs. Edward (Louise) Livingston, Dutchess County, N.Y. (quoted in Haley 1988: 46, 47, 52)
“Without going into any details of the interior, we may call attention to the unique effect of the pavilion, thirty feet wide, which forms the north

wing of this house. It opens from the library and drawing-room by low windows. Its ribbed roof is supported by a tasteful series of columns and arches, in the style of an Italian arcade. As it is on the north side of the dwelling, its position is always cool in summer; and this coolness is still farther increased by the abundant shade of tall old trees, whose heads cast a pleasant gloom, while their tall trunks allow the eye to feast on the rich landscape spread around it.

“At the distance of some hundred yards, we find ourselves on the river shore, and on a pretty jutting point of land stands a little rustic pavilion, from which a much lower and wider view of the landscape is again enjoyed. ...
“Passing under neat and tasteful archways of wirework, covered with rare climbers, we enter what is properly
“THE FLOWER GARDEN.
“In the centre of the garden stands a large vase of the Warwick pattern; others occupy the centres of parterres in the midst of its two main divisions,and at either end is a fanciful light summer-house, or pavilion, of Moresque character.”


  • Downing, A. J., 1850, describing a design for a country house ([1850] 1968: 357)
“[Referring to Design XXXII] On the right of this hall is a noble veranda, which, for want of a better name, we call the pavilion. To a Southern house, this would be the greatest necessity, besides adding much to the architectural beauty of the house—for, in fact, such a pavilion would be the lounging place, conversazione, and often dining-room itself, since it would be the coolest, airiest, and most agreeable part of the house during a certain part of the day. In summer, this pavilion, or its shadow, would give a softened light to the dining hall, while the large windows, thrown open to the floor, between the two, would make the dining-room fresh and pleasant in the most sultry days. To vary the uses of the pavilion, we will only suggest that the dinner being over, the dessert might be served there, and the dessert being concluded, gentlemen addicted to the soothing indulgence of a fragrant ‘Havana,’ would find the pavilion the best of smoking apartments, after the ladies had retired to the drawing-room.
“Even in the Middle states, the enjoyment of a large pavilion of this kind is very great during four months of the year. The only example that we have seen of such an appendage to the house is at Montgomery Place—one of the finest seat on the Hudson, where it is placed on the drawing-room side of the house, and at once impresses every visitor by its combination of beauty, dignity and utility. In short, although this feature may be omitted, without materially diminishing the beauty or convenience of this design, its adoption would give a completeness and significance to a first-rate country-house like this; completeness, since it affords something more than a veranda, viz. a room in the open air, the greatest luxury in a warm summer; significance, since it tells the story of a desideratum growing out of our climate, architecturally and fittingly supplied.” [Fig. 10]


  • Vedder, Sarah E., 1830–51, describing Custis-Lee Mansion (Arlington House), Arlington, Va. (Junior League of Washington 1977: 77)
“Arlington . . . was daily visited by strangers, and many were the picnic parties enjoyed there in the lovely woods surrounding the mansion. . . . Mr. Custis had two or three pavillions built to accommodate the parties, either to set the tables or to dance. Frequently he would come down to the grounds and participate in their amusements.”

Citations

[Dézallier d’Argenville, A.-J.], 1712, The Theory and Practice of Gardening ([1712] 1969: 76–77)

“The Ends and Extremities of a Park are beautified with Pavilions of Masonry, which the French call Belvederes, or Pavilions of Aurora, which are as pleasant to rest ones self in, after a long Walk, as they are to the Eye, for the handsome Prospect they yield; they serve also to retire into for Shelter when it rains. The word Belvedere is Italian, and signifies a beauteous Prospect, which is properly given to these Pavilions.”

Chambers, Ephraim, 1741–43, Cyclopaedia

(2:n.p.)

“PAVILLION,* in architecture, signifies a kind of turret, or building usually insulated, and contained under a single roof; sometimes square, and sometimes in form of a dome: thus called from the resemblance of its roof to a tent.

“*The word comes from the Italian padiglione, tent, and that from the Latin papilio.

“Pavillions are sometimes also projecting pieces, in the front of a building, marking the middle thereof. ...

“There are pavillions built in gardens, popularly called summer-houses, pleasure-houses, &c.— Some castles or forts consist only of a single pavillion.”

Johnson, Samuel, 1755, A Dictionary of the English Language (2:n.p.)

“PAVI’LION. n.s. [pavillion, French.] A tent; a temporary or moveable house.”

Repton, Humphry, 1803, Observations on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening

(p. 153) “Yet the summit of a naked brow, commanding views in every direction, may require a covered seat or pavilion; for such a situation, where an architectural building is proper, a circular temple with a dome, such as the temple of the Sybils, or that of Tivoli, is best calculated.”

Webster, Noah, 1828, An American Dictionary of the English Language (n.p.)

“PAVILION, n. pavil’yun [Fr. pavillon; Sp. pabellon; Port. pavilham; Arm. pavihon; W. pabell; It. paviglione and padiglione; L. papilio; a butterfly, and a pavilion. According to Owen, the Welsh pabell signifies a moving habitation.]

“1. A tent; a temporary movable habitation.

“2. In architecture, a kind of turret or building, usually insulated and contained under a single roof; sometimes square and sometimes in the form of a dome. Sometimes a pavilion is a projecting part in the front of a building; sometimes it flanks a corner. Encyc.”

Webster, Noah, 1848, An American Dictionary of

the English Language (p. 806)

“1. A tent. . . .

“2. In architecture, a kind of turret . . . Gwilt.

“The name is sometimes, though improperly, given to a summer-house in a garden. Brande.”

Downing, A. J., 1849, A Treatise on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening (pp. 456, 473)

“The temple and the pavilion are highly finished forms of covered seats, which are occasionally introduced in splendid places, where classic architecture prevails. There is a circular pavilion of this kind at the termination of one of the walks at Mr. Langdon’s residence, Hyde Park. ... [Fig. 11]

“Unity of expression is the maxim and guide in this department of the art, as in every other. . . .

“With regard to pavilions, summer-houses, rustic seats, and garden edifices of like character, they should, if possible, in all cases be introduced where they are manifestly appropriate or in harmony with the scene. Thus . . . a classic temple or pavilion may crown a beautiful and prominent knoll.”

Images

Notes

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