The Project Gutenberg eBook of Historic Shrines of America
Title: Historic Shrines of America
Author: John T. Faris
Release date: March 6, 2012 [eBook #39068]
Language: English
Credits: E-text prepared by Melissa McDaniel and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by Internet Archive (http://www.archive.org)
E-text prepared by Melissa McDaniel
and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
(http://www.pgdp.net)
from page images generously made available by
Internet Archive
(http://www.archive.org)
| Note: | Images of the original pages are available through Internet Archive. See http://www.archive.org/details/historicshrines00faririch |
Historic Shrines of America
BY JOHN T. FARIS
HISTORIC SHRINES OF
AMERICA
BEING THE STORY OF ONE HUNDRED
AND TWENTY HISTORIC BUILDINGS
AND THE PIONEERS WHO MADE
THEM NOTABLE
BY
JOHN T. FARIS
Member of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania and Fellow of the
American Geographical Society
Author of "Real Stories from Our History," "Old Roads
Out of Philadelphia," etc.
ILLUSTRATED
NEW YORK
GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY
Copyright, 1918,
By George H. Doran Company
Printed in the United States of America
FOREWORD
Circular tours have long been popular in England. There was a time—as there will be a time again—when American visitors felt that to make the rounds of the cathedral towns or the historic castles or the homes and haunts of great men and women, was a necessary part of seeing the tight little island.
"What a pity it is that we in America have no such wealth of historic places," one returning tourist was heard to remark. "Oh, of course, there are a few spots like Independence Hall and Concord and Lexington," he went on, "but there are not enough of them to make it worth while to plan a tour such as those in which we have taken delight in England."
It was easy to point out to the traveler his mistake; most Americans know that the country is rich in places of historic interest. Just how rich it is they may not realize until they make a serious study of the landmarks of their own land, as does the European tourist of the centers noted in his guidebook.
In fact, there are in America so many houses, churches, and other buildings having a vital connection with our history that volumes would be required to tell of them all. Even a brief record of the buildings whose owners or occupants played a conspicuous part in the early history of the country would fill a large book.
It is fascinating to learn of these houses and public buildings and to delve into the biographies which tell what happened to the people who lived in them. Fiction seems tame after connecting, for instance, the story of Alexander Hamilton and Elizabeth Schuyler with the Ford Mansion and the Campfield House at Morristown, New Jersey, then with the Schuyler Mansion in Albany, New York, and The Grange in New York City. The heart of the patriot burns with new love for his country as he reads of Faneuil Hall and the Old South Church and Carpenters' Hall. The story of the Revolution is clothed with living interest when Washington and his generals are followed to Valley Forge and Newburgh and Cambridge and Morristown and Princeton. Fresh appreciation of the sacrifice of the pioneers comes from going with them into the garrison houses of New England, along the Wilderness Road in Kentucky, to the settlements on the Ohio, or to the banks of the Wabash where more than one Indian treaty was made.
Next comes the keen pleasure of visiting the houses and churches which, through the piecing together of these facts, have become like familiar friends. The vacation journey that includes a careful study of a few of these buildings becomes a fascinating course in patriotism.
It is the purpose of the author of "Historic Shrines of America" to tell just enough about each of one hundred and twenty of these buildings of historic interest to create a hunger for more; to present pictures sufficiently attractive to make those who turn the pages of the book determine to visit the places described; to arrange the brief chapters in such sequence that it will be possible for the reader to plan for successive vacations a series of journeys through the centers where historic buildings may be found, and, in doing this, to pass by so many structures of interest that the reader and the tourist will have abundant opportunity to discover houses and churches of which he will say, "I wonder why this was not included."
CONTENTS
| CHAPTER | PAGE | |
| ONE: IN THE LAND OF THE PILGRIMS | ||
| I | The Old State House, Boston, Massachusetts | 19 |
| II | Paul Revere's House, Boston, Massachusetts | 23 |
| III | Faneuil Hall, Boston, Massachusetts | 28 |
| IV | Three Historic Churches of Boston | 32 |
| V | Elmwood, Cambridge, Massachusetts | 36 |
| VI | The Craigie House, Cambridge, Massachusetts | 40 |
| VII | The Adams Houses, Quincy, Massachusetts | 44 |
| VIII | The Quincy Mansion, Quincy, Massachusetts | 49 |
| IX | Fernside Farm, Haverhill, Massachusetts | 54 |
| X | The Duston Garrison House, Haverhill, Massachusetts | 56 |
| XI | The Old Manse and the Wayside, Concord, Massachusetts | 61 |
| XII | The Royall House, Medford, Massachusetts | 66 |
| XIII | Broadhearth and the Bennet-Boardman House, Saugus, Massachusetts | 69 |
| XIV | The Colonel Jeremiah Lee House, Marblehead, Massachusetts | 72 |
| XV | The Old South Church, Newburyport, Massachusetts | 75 |
| XVI | The First Baptist Church, Providence, Rhode Island | 80 |
| TWO: WHERE PATROONS AND KNICKERBOCKERS FLOURISHED | ||
| XVII | The Morris-Jumel Mansion, New York City | 87 |
| XVIII | The Philipse Manor House, Yonkers, New York | 91 |
| XIX | St. Paul's Chapel, New York City | 95 |
| XX | Fraunces' Tavern, New York City | 97 |
| XXI | The Grange, New York City | 100 |
| XXII | The Van Cortlandt House, New York City | 104 |
| XXIII | The Hasbrouck House, Newburgh, New York | 106 |
| THREE: ACROSS THE JERSEYS WITH THE PATRIOTS | ||
| XXIV | The Franklin Palace, Perth Amboy, New Jersey | 115 |
| XXV | The Church at Caldwell, New Jersey | 119 |
| XXVI | Old Tennent Church, Freehold, New Jersey | 122 |
| XXVII | The Ford Mansion, Morristown, New Jersey | 126 |
| XXVIII | Nassau Hall, Princeton, New Jersey | 130 |
| XXIX | Three Historic Houses at Princeton, New Jersey | 134 |
| XXX | The Springfield Meeting House, New Jersey | 138 |
| FOUR: RAMBLES ABOUT THE CITY OF BROTHERLY LOVE | ||
| XXXI | The Letitia Penn House, Philadelphia | 145 |
| XXXII | Carpenters' Hall, Philadelphia | 149 |
| XXXIII | St. Peter's Church, Philadelphia | 153 |
| XXXIV | Cliveden, Germantown, Philadelphia | 156 |
| XXXV | Old Pine Street Church, Philadelphia | 159 |
| XXXVI | Independence Hall, Philadelphia | 162 |
| XXXVII | The David Rittenhouse Home, near Philadelphia | 170 |
| XXXVIII | The Headquarters at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania | 174 |
| XXXIX | Three Headquarters of Washington | 178 |
| XL | Sweetbrier-on-the-Schuylkill, Philadelphia | 183 |
| XLI | Mill Grove and Fatlands, near Philadelphia | 187 |
| XLII | Waynesborough, near Paoli, Pennsylvania | 192 |
| XLIII | The Moravian Church, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania | 196 |
| FIVE: OVER THE MASON AND DIXON LINE | ||
| XLIV | Historic Landmarks at New Castle, Delaware | 203 |
| XLV | The Ridgely House, Dover, Delaware | 208 |
| XLVI | Rehoboth Church on the Pocomoke, Maryland | 211 |
| XLVII | Doughoregan Manor, near Ellicott City, Maryland | 216 |
| XLVIII | The Upton Scott House, Annapolis, Maryland | 220 |
| XLIX | The Capitol at Washington | 225 |
| L | The White House, Washington | 230 |
| LI | The Octagon House, Washington | 234 |
| SIX: HOMES AND HAUNTS OF THE CAVALIERS | ||
| LII | Mount Vernon, Virginia | 241 |
| LIII | Arlington, Virginia | 246 |
| LIV | Christ Church, Alexandria, Virginia | 249 |
| LV | The Mary Washington House, Fredericksburg, Virginia | 251 |
| LVI | Greenway and Sherwood Forest, Virginia | 257 |
| LVII | Two Historic Courthouses of Virginia | 262 |
| LVIII | St. John's Church, Richmond | 266 |
| LIX | The Nelson House and the Moore House, Yorktown, Virginia | 270 |
| LX | The John Marshall House, Richmond, Virginia | 274 |
| LXI | Five Old Houses of Tidewater, Virginia | 278 |
| LXII | Gunston Hall, Virginia | 281 |
| LXIII | The Washington College Building, Lexington, Virginia | 285 |
| LXIV | Bruton Parish Church, Williamsburg, Virginia | 288 |
| LXV | William and Mary College, Williamsburg, Virginia | 291 |
| LXVI | The Monumental Church, Richmond, Virginia | 294 |
| LXVII | Montpelier, Orange County, Virginia | 296 |
| LXVIII | Oak Hill, Loudoun County, Virginia | 301 |
| LXIX | Red Hill, Charlotte County, Virginia | 305 |
| LXX | Pohick Church, Truro Parish, Virginia | 311 |
| LXXI | Mount Airy, Richmond County, Virginia | 314 |
| LXXII | Two of Virginia's Oldest Church Buildings | 318 |
| LXXIII | Monticello, near Charlottesville, Virginia | 322 |
| LXXIV | The University of Virginia at Charlottesville, Virginia | 326 |
| SEVEN: THROUGH THE SUNNY SOUTH | ||
| LXXV | Three Old Churches in Charleston, South Carolina | 333 |
| LXXVI | The House of Rebecca Motte, Charleston, South Carolina | 336 |
| LXXVII | The Independent Church, Savannah, Georgia | 340 |
| LXXVIII | The Cabildo of New Orleans | 343 |
| LXXIX | The Alamo, San Antonio, Texas | 347 |
| LXXX | The Hermitage, Nashville, Tennessee | 351 |
| LXXXI | Ashland, Lexington, Kentucky | 355 |
| LXXXII | Sportsman's Hall, Whitley's Station, Kentucky | 359 |
| LXXXIII | White Haven, near St. Louis, Missouri | 362 |
| EIGHT: ALL THE WAY BACK TO NEW ENGLAND | ||
| LXXXIV | The Abraham Lincoln House, Springfield, Illinois | 369 |
| LXXXV | The Governor's Palace at Vincennes, Indiana | 374 |
| LXXXVI | The House of General Rufus Putnam, Marietta, Ohio | 377 |
| LXXXVII | Monument Place, Elm Grove, West Virginia | 381 |
| LXXXVIII | The Castle at Fort Niagara, New York | 386 |
| LXXXIX | The Schuyler Mansion, Albany, New York | 391 |
| XC | The Wentworth House, Portsmouth, New Hampshire | 395 |
| XCI | The Wadsworth Longfellow House, Portland, Maine | 400 |
| Bibliography | 407 | |
| Index | 411 | |
ILLUSTRATIONS
| Independence Hall, Rear View, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | Frontispiece |
| PAGE | |
| Old State House, Boston, Massachusetts | 25 |
| Paul Revere House, Boston, Massachusetts | 26 |
| Hancock-Clarke House, Lexington, Massachusetts | 26 |
| Old North Church, Boston, Massachusetts | 34 |
| Old South Church, Boston, Massachusetts | 35 |
| Craigie House, Cambridge, Massachusetts | 48 |
| Fernside Farm, Haverhill, Massachusetts | 48 |
| Duston Garrison House, Haverhill, Massachusetts | 49 |
| Royall House, Medford, Massachusetts | 49 |
| Broadhearth, Saugus, Massachusetts | 70 |
| Bennet-Boardman House, Saugus, Massachusetts | 70 |
| Old South Church, Newburyport, Massachusetts | 71 |
| Morris-Jumel House, New York City | 97 |
| Philipse Manor House, Yonkers, New York | 97 |
| Fraunces' Tavern, New York City | 98 |
| Van Cortlandt House, New York City | 98 |
| The Franklin Palace, Perth Amboy, New Jersey | 121 |
| Old Tennent Church, Freehold, New Jersey | 121 |
| Nassau Hall and the First President's House, Princeton, New Jersey | 122 |
| Morven, Princeton, New Jersey | 122 |
| Letitia Penn House, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 146 |
| St. Peter's Protestant Episcopal Church, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 147 |
| Cliveden, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 160 |
| Third (Old Pine Street) Presbyterian Church, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 160 |
| David Rittenhouse's House, Norriton, Pennsylvania | 161 |
| Dawesfield, near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 161 |
| Emlen House, near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 179 |
| Fatlands, near Phoenixville, Pennsylvania | 179 |
| Waynesborough, Paoli, Pennsylvania | 180 |
| Moravian Church, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania | 180 |
| Amstel House, New Castle, Delaware | 205 |
| Doorway of Amstel House, New Castle, Delaware | 205 |
| Hall of Read House, New Castle, Delaware | 205 |
| Doorway of Rodney House, New Castle, Delaware | 206 |
| Doorway of Stewart House, New Castle, Delaware | 206 |
| Doorway of Read House, New Castle, Delaware | 206 |
| Doorway of Presbyterian Church, New Castle, Delaware | 206 |
| Immanuel Church, New Castle, Delaware | 217 |
| Ridgely House, Dover, Delaware | 218 |
| Doughoregan Manor, near Ellicott City, Maryland | 218 |
| Upton Scott House, Annapolis, Maryland | 233 |
| Octagon House, Washington, D. C. | 233 |
| The Stairway, Octagon House, Washington, D. C. | 234 |
| Mount Vernon, Virginia, Rear View | 244 |
| Arlington, Virginia | 244 |
| Christ Church, Alexandria, Virginia | 245 |
| Mary Washington's House, Fredericksburg, Virginia | 262 |
| Hanover Court House, Virginia | 262 |
| St. John's Church, Richmond, Virginia | 263 |
| Nelson House, Yorktown, Virginia | 263 |
| Westover on the James, Virginia | 282 |
| Gunston Hall on the Potomac, Virginia | 282 |
| Washington College Building, Lexington, Virginia | 283 |
| Bruton Parish Church, Williamsburg, Virginia | 283 |
| Monumental Church, Richmond, Virginia | 314 |
| Pohick Church, Virginia | 314 |
| Mount Airy, Richmond County, Virginia | 315 |
| University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia | 315 |
| Independent Presbyterian Church, Savannah, Georgia | 336 |
| Pringle House, Charleston, South Carolina | 337 |
| The Cabildo, New Orleans, Louisiana | 337 |
| The Hermitage, Nashville, Tennessee | 352 |
| Ashland, Lexington, Kentucky | 352 |
| Sportsman's Hall, Whitley's Station, Kentucky | 353 |
| White Haven, St. Louis, Missouri | 353 |
| Abraham Lincoln's House, Springfield, Illinois | 370 |
| William Henry Harrison's House, Vincennes, Indiana | 370 |
| Rufus Putnam's House, Marietta, Ohio | 371 |
| The Schuyler Mansion, Albany, New York | 371 |
| Wentworth House, Portsmouth, New Hampshire | 394 |
| Warner House, Portsmouth, New Hampshire | 394 |
| Wadsworth Longfellow House, Portland, Maine | 395 |
ONE: IN THE LAND OF THE PILGRIMS
The riches of the Commonwealth
Are free, strong minds, and hearts of health;
And more to her than gold or grain,
The cunning hand and cultured brain.
For well she keeps her ancient stock,
The stubborn strength of Pilgrim Rock;
And still maintains, with milder laws,
And clearer light, the Good Old Cause!
Nor heeds the skeptic's puny hands,
While near her school the church-spire stands;
Nor fears the blinded bigot's rule,
While near her church-spire stands the school.
—John Greenleaf Whittier.
ONE: IN THE LAND OF THE PILGRIMS
I
THE OLD STATE HOUSE, BOSTON,
MASSACHUSETTS
FROM WHOSE BALCONY THE DECLARATION OF
INDEPENDENCE WAS PROCLAIMED
Thirty-three years after Captain John Smith sailed into Boston Harbor, the first Town House was built. This was in 1657. The second Town House, which was built on the same site, was erected in 1712. In 1748 the third Town House, later the Old State House, followed the structure of 1712, the outer walls of the old building being used in the new.
Since 1689, when Governor Andros' tyranny was overthrown, the old building has been in the thick of historic events. How it figured in the Boston Massacre was shown by John Tudor in his diary. He wrote:
"March, 1770. On Monday evening the 5th current, a few Minutes after 9 o'clock a most horrid murder was committed in King Street before the custom house Door by 8 or 9 Soldiers under the Command of Capt. Thos Preston of the Main Guard on the South side of the Town House. This unhappy affair began by Some Boys & young fellows throwing Snow Balls at the sentry placed at the Custom house Door. On which 8 or 9 Soldiers Came to his Assistance. Soon after a Number of people collected, when the Capt commanded the Soldiers to fire, which they did and 3 Men were Kil'd on the Spot & several Mortaly Wounded, one of which died next Morning.... Leut Governor Hutchinson, who was Commander in Chiefe, was sent for & Came to the Council Chamber, where some of the Magustrates attended. The Governor desired the Multitude about 10 O'Clock to sepperat & to go home peaceable & he would do all in his power that Justice should be done &c. The 29 Regiment being then under Arms on the south side of the Townhouse, but the people insisted that the Soldiers should be ordered to their Barracks first before they would sepperat. Which being done the people sepperated aboute 1 O'Clock."
Next day the people met in Faneuil Hall, and demanded the immediate removal of the troops. The demand being refused, they met again at Faneuil Hall, but adjourned to Old South Church, since the larger hall was required to accommodate the aroused citizens. A new committee, headed by Samuel Adams, sought Hutchinson in the Council Chamber of the Town House, and secured his permission to remove the troops without delay.
The next event of note in the history of the old building was the public reading there of the Declaration of Independence on July 18, 1776, in accordance with the message of John Hancock, President of the Continental Congress, who asked that it be proclaimed "in such a mode that the people may be impressed by it."
Abigail Adams told in a letter to her husband, John Adams, of the reading:
"I went with the multitude to King street to hear the Declaration Proclamation for Independence read and proclaimed.... Great attention was given to every word.... Thus ends royal Authority in the state."
A British prisoner on parole, who was an invited guest at the reading of the Declaration, wrote a detailed narrative of the events of the day, in the Town Hall, in which he said:
"Exactly as the clock struck one, Colonel Crafts, who occupied the chair, rose and, silence being obtained, read aloud the declaration, which announced to the world that the tie of allegiance and protection, which had so long held Britain and her North American colonies together, was forever separated. This being finished, the gentlemen stood up, and each, repeating the words as they were spoken by an officer, swore to uphold, at the sacrifice of life, the rights of his country. Meanwhile the town clerk read from the balcony the Declaration of Independence to the crowd; at the close of which, a Shout began in the hall, passed like an electric spark to the streets, which rang with loud huzzas, the slow and measured boom of Cannon, and the rattle of musketry."
Thirteen years later, when Washington visited Boston, he passed through a triumphal arch to the State House. In his diary he told of what followed his entrance to the historic building:
"Three cheers was given by a vast concourse of people, Who, by this time, had assembled at the Arch—then followed an ode composed in honor of the President; and well sung by a band of select singers—After this three cheers—followed by the different Professions and Mechanics in the order they were drawn up, with their colors, through a lane of the people which had thronged about the arch under which they passed."
The ode sung that day was as follows: