Difference between revisions of "Belmont (Philadelphia, PA)"
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− | In comparison with other Philadelphia-area country houses, Belmont was precious in size, as well as décor. Soon after completing the house in 1745, [[William Peters|Peters]] began building again, adding outbuildings on the north and south sides which he connected to the central mansion by means of covered [[piazza]]s. <ref> Reinberger, 1998: 21, 31, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/UWBTRV23 view on Zotero]; see also Fiske Kimball, “Belmont, Fairmount Park,” ''The Pennsylvania Museum Bulletin'', 22 (1927): 333, 335, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/H32TJPUE view on Zotero]. </ref> Even after these additions, <span id="ChastelluxTranslator_cite"></span> an English visitor characterized Belmont as "a tasty little box" <ref> Anonymous English translator's note in Chastellux, 1787, 1: 301, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/ITD6E8FB view on Zotero], </ref> ([[#ChastelluxTranslator|view text]]), and <span id="Chastellux_cite"></span> the Marquis de Chastellux noted succinctly that is was "not large." <ref> Chastellux, 1787, 1: 301, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/ITD6E8FB view on Zotero] </ref> ([[# | + | In comparison with other Philadelphia-area country houses, Belmont was precious in size, as well as décor. Soon after completing the house in 1745, [[William Peters|Peters]] began building again, adding outbuildings on the north and south sides which he connected to the central mansion by means of covered [[piazza]]s. <ref> Reinberger, 1998: 21, 31, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/UWBTRV23 view on Zotero]; see also Fiske Kimball, “Belmont, Fairmount Park,” ''The Pennsylvania Museum Bulletin'', 22 (1927): 333, 335, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/H32TJPUE view on Zotero]. </ref> Even after these additions, <span id="ChastelluxTranslator_cite"></span> an English visitor characterized Belmont as "a tasty little box" <ref> Anonymous English translator's note in Chastellux, 1787, 1: 301, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/ITD6E8FB view on Zotero], </ref> ([[#ChastelluxTranslator|view text]]), and <span id="Chastellux_cite"></span> the Marquis de Chastellux noted succinctly that is was "not large." <ref> Chastellux, 1787, 1: 301, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/ITD6E8FB view on Zotero] </ref> ([[#Chastellux|view text]]). Hannah Callendar's account suggests that [[William Peters|Peters's]] additions served to dramatize the opening up of the landscape from the interior space of the house. Visitors entered through one of the added side buildings and passed through the connecting covered [[piazza]] to the lavishly decorated hall. There, they were greeted by the sight of a panoramic landscape, or, as Callender put it, <span id="Callender_cite"></span> by a "[[prospect]] bounded by the Jerseys like a blue ridge," <ref> Quoted in Vaux, 1888: 455, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/STWXKSK3 view on Zotero]. For this interpretation of the visitor’s experience at Belmont, see Reinberger, 1998: 32, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/UWBTRV23 view on Zotero], </ref> ([[#Callender|view text]]). [[William Peters|Peters]] continued to add acreage to Belmont through subsequent land purchases made in 1743 (113 acres), 1749 (22 acres), and 1764 (11 acres). <ref> For more information, see the website Mapping West Philadelphia: Landowners in October 1777, http://www.archives.upenn.edu/WestPhila1777/map.php. </ref> His correspondence over that time indicates a shift in his conception of the estate from a “retirement” (or, suburban villa and [[pleasure garden]]) to a “[[plantation]]” (or working farm), although he continued to employ a full-time gardener, George Severitt, as late as 1767. <ref> Reinberger, 1998: 31, 37, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/UWBTRV23 view on Zotero].</ref>Following [[William Peters|Peters]]’s return to England in 1768, Belmont became the property of his eldest son, Richard, who welcomed many notable visitors and carried out further additions to the property. |
Revision as of 14:14, March 23, 2015
Belmont Mansion, a country estate on the Schuylkill River outside of Philadelphia, was the home of the English lawyer and jurist William Peters and of his son, the judge and agriculturalist Richard Peters. It is one of the earliest instances of English Palladian style adapted to the architecture and landscaping of an American villa.
Overview
Alternate Names:
Site Dates: 1743-1751
Site Owner(s): William Peters; Richard Peters
Site Designer(s): William Peters
Location: View on Google Maps
History
William Peters named his estate Belmont in honor of its lofty situation on a height commanding panoramic views of the Schuylkill River and surrounding countryside. Peters's initial purchase in 1742 consisted of 113 acres of farm land on the west bank of the river, and extended from the water's edge up a steep ascent to a point one mile north that Peters would later punctuate with a monumental obelisk. The property also included a small island of about two acres, still known as Peters Island. [1] Belmont’s location would remain one of the most admired on the Schuylkill for many decades. In the 1780s, when “the beautiful banks of the Schuylkill [were] everywhere covered with elegant country houses,” an English gentleman visiting Philadelphia would still single out Belmont as “the most enchanting spot that nature can embellish.” [2]
Immediately after acquiring the Belmont property, Peters refurbished and expanded an existing small stone cottage as a temporary residence and began developing what he called a "Country Retirement": a luxury villa surrounded by an ornamental landscape that would provide a pleasurable respite from the business of town life. [3] A local precedent for this kind of suburban retreat was Thomas Penn’s Springettsbury estate on the opposite side of the Schuylkill. In the 1730s Penn had laid out the property as a pleasure garden rather than a working farm, with traditional formal plantings such as parterres and tree-lined alleys. A detailed account by Hannah Callender, who visited Belmont in June of 1762, indicates that Peters utilized some of the same traditional garden features that Penn employed at Springettsbury, including parterres, axial alleys, and a long, straight avenue lined with hemlocks leading up to the house. He combined these already slightly old-fashioned features with more naturalistic elements, such as a wilderness with serpentine walks, and added fashionable ornaments, such as the obelisk, a Chinese temple, and a labyrinth of clipped cedar and spruce. [4] Peters sited his house near the center of the property, with a direct view of the obelisk at one end, and Peters Island at the other. [5] Belmont may have influenced Penn's efforts to update the landscaping of Springettsbury in the early 1740s by softening the rigid formality of his original plantings with more naturalistic and picturesque elements. In 1743, he wrote from England informing Peters that he hoped to visit Belmont soon and to "[gain] something by your experience." [6]
The house Peters built at Belmont was extremely fashionable for its time and place. It was among the first in America to imitate the distinctive suburban villa style that flourished in England early in the 18th century and that was modeled, in turn, on the refined classicism of the Italian Renaissance architect Andrea Palladio (1508-1580). In addition to drawing on examples he had seen in England, Peters appears to have derived ideas from English pattern books, such as James Gibbs’s Book of Architecture (1728), William Kent’s Designs of Inigo Jones (1727), and Batty Langley’s The City and Country Builder's and Workman's Treasury of Designs (1740). [7] As originally executed, Belmont Mansion featured a symmetrical design, with a nearly square central hall flanked by small side chambers in each corner. The woodwork of the fireplace and pedimented doorways and the plasterwork ornamenting the ceiling were all executed in accordance with current English fashion. [8] Musical motifs in the plasterwork of the central hall presumably reflect the use of that space for instrumental performances. Peters is known to have imported music books from England, and in 1742 he requested that Thomas Penn find him a musician who could play the violin and harpsichord. [9] As further evidence of his taste for the arts, Peters displayed a collection of paintings and bronze sculptures in the central hall. [10]
In comparison with other Philadelphia-area country houses, Belmont was precious in size, as well as décor. Soon after completing the house in 1745, Peters began building again, adding outbuildings on the north and south sides which he connected to the central mansion by means of covered piazzas. [11] Even after these additions, an English visitor characterized Belmont as "a tasty little box" [12] (view text), and the Marquis de Chastellux noted succinctly that is was "not large." [13] (view text). Hannah Callendar's account suggests that Peters's additions served to dramatize the opening up of the landscape from the interior space of the house. Visitors entered through one of the added side buildings and passed through the connecting covered piazza to the lavishly decorated hall. There, they were greeted by the sight of a panoramic landscape, or, as Callender put it, by a "prospect bounded by the Jerseys like a blue ridge," [14] (view text). Peters continued to add acreage to Belmont through subsequent land purchases made in 1743 (113 acres), 1749 (22 acres), and 1764 (11 acres). [15] His correspondence over that time indicates a shift in his conception of the estate from a “retirement” (or, suburban villa and pleasure garden) to a “plantation” (or working farm), although he continued to employ a full-time gardener, George Severitt, as late as 1767. [16]Following Peters’s return to England in 1768, Belmont became the property of his eldest son, Richard, who welcomed many notable visitors and carried out further additions to the property.
--Robyn Asleson
Texts
- Callender, Hannah, June 4, 1762, diary entry, (quoted in Vaux, 1888: 454-55) [17]back up to discussion
- "...went to William Peters's house having some acquaintance with his wife. She was at home and with her daughter Polly received us kindly in one wing of the house. After a while passed through a covered passage to the large hall, well furnished, the top adorned with instruments of music, coats of arms, crests and other ornaments in stucco, its sides by paintings and statues in bronze. From the front of this hall you have a prospect bounded by the Jerseys like a blue ridge. A broad walk of English Cherry trees leads down to the river. The doors of the house opening opposite admit a prospect of the length of the garden over a broad gravel walk to a large handsome summer house on a green. From the windows a vista is terminated by an obelisk. On the right you enter a labyrinth of hedge of low cedar and spruce. In the middle stands a statue of Apollo. In the garden are statues of Diana, Fame and Mercury with urns. We left the garden for a wood cut into vistas. In the midst is a Chinese temple for a summer house. One avenue gives a fine prospect of the City. With a spy glass you discern the houses and hospital distinctly. Another avenue looks to the obelisk."
- Chastellux, François Jean, Marquis de, c. 1780-82, Travels in North America (1787: 1: 304) [19]back up to discussion
"Nothing can equal the beauties of the coup d'oeil which the banks of the Schuylkill present, in descending towards the south to return to Philadelphia.
"I found a pretty numerous company assembled at dinner at the Chevalier de la Luzerne's, which was augmented by the arrival of the Comte de Custine and the M. de Laval. In the evening we took them to see the President of the Congress, who was not at home, and then to Mr. Peters, the Secretary to the Board of War, to whom it was my first visit. His house is not large, nor his office of great importance."
- Anonymous English translator of Marquis De Chastellux, c. 1787, Travels in North America, 1780-81-82 (1787: 1: 301) [19]back up to discussion
- "The beautiful banks of the Schuylkill are every where covered with elegant country houses; among others, those of Mr. Penn, the late proprietor, Mr. Hamilton, and Mr. Peters, late Secretary to the Board of War, are on the most delightful situations. The tasty little box of the last gentleman is on the most enchanting spot that nature can embellish, and besides the variegated beauties of the rural banks of the Schuylkill, commands the Delaware, and the shipping mounting and descending it, where it is joined at right angles by the former. From hence is the most romantic ride up the river to the Falls, in which the opposite bank is likewise seen beautifully interspersed with the country houses of the opulent citizens of the capital. On your arrival at the Falls, every little knoll or eminence is occupied by one of these charming retreats."
- Watson, Joshua Rowley, June 17, 1816, "Watson's American Diary" (quoted in Foster, 1997: 292) [20]
"In the evening I accompanied my Uncle over to Bellmont to pay my respects to Judge Peters — the House is finely situated and looks down on the River Schuylkill command[ing] a view of the grounds of Lansdown, Eaglesfield and the distance closed by the City & Jersies. He show'd me his Gardens and Orchards in the latter of which was a variety of Grasses, but I saw none of that sort which in England is commonly called Heaver. In the Garden he show'd me a Chesnut Tree which General Washington planted, the day he came out to take leave of his old friend.... He has promised me some fruit from it, & a young tree of the same....
"I was also shown a grove of Pines in which the General used frequently to walk in and converse with the Judge....
"Bellmont house is old, but is well built of stone and like all the Country houses, has a Piazza in front. I don't see why those in England should not have the same, which would secure a fine airy walk in all weathers, besides being ornamental to the building."
- Downing, Andrew Jackson, 1844, (1844: 31-32) [21]
- "The seat of the late Judge Peters, about five miles from Philadelphia, was, 30 years ago, a noted specimen of the ancient school of landscape gardening. Its proprietor had a most extended reputation as a scientific agriculturist, and his place was also no less remarkable for the design and culture of its pleasure-grounds, than for the excellence of its farm. Long and stately avenues, with vistas terminated by obelisks, a garden adorned with marble vases, busts and statues, and pleasure grounds filled with the rarest trees and shrubs, were conspicuous features here. Some of the latter are now so remarkable as to attract strongly the attention of the visitor. Among them, is the chestnut planted by Washington which produces the largest and finest fruit; very large hollies; and a curious old box tree much higher than the mansion near which it stands. But the most striking feature now, is the still remaining grand old avenue of hemlocks, (Abies canadensis.) Many of these trees, which were planted 100 years ago, are now venerable specimens, ninety feet high, whose huge trunks and wide spread branches, are in many cases densely wreathed and draped with masses of English Ivy, forming the most picturesque, sylvan objects we ever beheld."
Images
References
Mapping West Philadelphia Landowners in 1777
Philadelphia Architects and Buildings
Notes
- ↑ Richard Peters, Jr., “Belmont Mansion,” Proceedings of the Numismatic and Antiquarian Society of Philadelphia, 30 (1925): 78-79, 81, view on Zotero.
- ↑ Anonymous English translator's note in François Jean, Marquis de Chastellux, Travels in North America in the Years 1780, 1781, and 1782, 2 vols. (London: G. G. J. and J. Robinson, 1787), 1: 301, view on Zotero.
- ↑ Mark Reinberger, “Belmont: The Bourgeois Villa in Eighteenth-Century Philadelphia,”, Arris: Journal of the Southeast Chapter of the Society of Architectural Historians, 9 (1998): 17, view on Zotero.
- ↑ For the connection between this hybrid, or "transitional" landscape style and English Palladian architecture, see Reinberger, 1998: 27, view on Zotero.
- ↑ Reinberger, 1998: 25, and fig. 36, view on Zotero.
- ↑ Thomas Penn to William Peters, August 22, 1743, quoted in Reinberger, 1998: 17, view on Zotero.
- ↑ Reinberger, 1998: 22-23, view on Zotero; Fiske Kimball, “Belmont, Fairmount Park,” The Pennsylvania Museum Bulletin, 22 (1927): 338-39, view on Zotero; Amy Cole Ives, “Belmont Mansion, A Conditions Survey of the Ornamental Plaster Ceilings of Rooms 101 and 205,” Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Pennsylvania, 1996, 13-14, view on Zotero.
- ↑ Ives, 1996, 15-16, view on Zotero.
- ↑ Reinberger, 1998: 25, view on Zotero.
- ↑ George Vaux, "Extracts from the Diary of Hannah Callender," Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, 12 (1888): 454-55, view on Zotero.
- ↑ Reinberger, 1998: 21, 31, view on Zotero; see also Fiske Kimball, “Belmont, Fairmount Park,” The Pennsylvania Museum Bulletin, 22 (1927): 333, 335, view on Zotero.
- ↑ Anonymous English translator's note in Chastellux, 1787, 1: 301, view on Zotero,
- ↑ Chastellux, 1787, 1: 301, view on Zotero
- ↑ Quoted in Vaux, 1888: 455, view on Zotero. For this interpretation of the visitor’s experience at Belmont, see Reinberger, 1998: 32, view on Zotero,
- ↑ For more information, see the website Mapping West Philadelphia: Landowners in October 1777, http://www.archives.upenn.edu/WestPhila1777/map.php.
- ↑ Reinberger, 1998: 31, 37, view on Zotero.
- ↑ Vaux, 1888view on Zotero.
- ↑ Vaux, 1888view on Zotero.
- ↑ 19.0 19.1 Chastellux, 1787, view on Zotero.
- ↑ Kathleen A. Foster, Captain Watson’s Travels in America: The Sketchbooks and Diary of Joshua Rowley Watson, 1772-1818 (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1997,) 292, view on Zotero
- ↑ Andrew Jackson Downing, A Treatise on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening, Adapted to North America, 2nd edn (New York and London: Wiley and Putnam, 1844), view on Zotero