MEMBERS
Mrs. Lewis Audenried
Mrs. Rudolph Blankenburg
Mrs. William T. Carter
Mrs. E. Bissell Clay
Mrs. S. Grey Dayton
Mrs. William A. Dick
Mrs. Fitz-Eugene Dixon
Mrs. Russell Duane
Miss Louisa Eyre
Mrs. Stanley G. Flagg, Jr.
Mrs. George H. Frazier
Mrs. Henry C. Gibson
Mrs. F. Woodson Hancock
Mrs. Charles Wolcott Henry
Mrs. John S. Jenks
Mrs. Charles F. Judson
Mrs. Robert R. Logan
Mrs. W. Logan MacCoy
Mrs. John C. Martin
Mrs. Sydney E. Martin
Mrs. John D. McIlhenny
Mrs. Richard Waln Meirs
Mrs. Thornton Oakley
Mrs. Henry Norris Platt
Mrs. Eli Kirk Price
Mrs. Logan Rhoads
Mrs. C. Shillard-Smith
Miss Jessie Willcox Smith
Mrs. John B. Stetson
Mrs. W. Standley Stokes
Mrs. William H. Walbaum
Mrs. P. A. B. Widener, 2nd
Mrs. C. Stewart Wurts
HONORARY MEMBERS
Mrs. Hampton L. Carson
Miss Margaret Clyde
Mrs. Henry S. Grove
Mrs. Arthur V. Meigs
Mrs. Edward T. Stotesbury
Mrs. M. Hampton Todd
Mrs. Percival Roberts, Jr.
PHILADELPHIA HOUSES IN COLONIAL TIMES
Philadelphia was the most important city in the colonies and the home of many leaders of thought and action in the days which saw the birth of the American nation. We are fortunate in having preserved for us the few historic landmarks in Fairmount Park, which have been restored through the leadership of the Pennsylvania Museum of Art and cooperative institutions and by the generosity of Philadelphians. This book contains pictures and sketches of eight old colonial houses, several of which date back to the middle of the eighteenth century.
Of the houses described, Cedar Grove, Belmont, The Cliffs, Woodford and Mount Pleasant antedate the Revolution, and are examples of early Georgian and mid-Georgian styles. The simple stone cottages which stand on the grounds at Belmont, Woodford and Strawberry antedate in style the mansion-houses there. Even the oldest portion of Cedar Grove, 1721, already shows a front of squared masonry, while the oldest part of Woodford has on the end the glazed headers which characterize the earliest brick buildings of the colony. The later houses are generally covered with stucco.
By the middle of the century there were bold classic doorways, as at Belmont, Woodford (then enlarged) and Mount Pleasant. Rich ornamented ceilings from about 1760 are found at Belmont; the principal rooms at Woodford and Mount Pleasant are adorned with elaborate carving in the Chippendale style. After the Revolution the more slender proportions of the Adam style were adopted, in the later part of Cedar Grove and at Lemon Hill, Sweetbrier and Strawberry. The wings at Strawberry show the severe classic detail of the Greek Revival.
SWEETBRIER, 1797 Shown on map as No. 1
SWEETBRIER
The first owner of Sweetbrier was Samuel Breck, who records in his notes that he built his mansion in 1797, having “out-buildings of every kind suitable for elegance and comfort. The prospect consists of the river, animated by its great trade carried on in boats of about thirty tons, drawn by horses; of a beautiful sloping lawn, terminating at that river, now nearly four hundred yards wide opposite the portico; of side-screen woods; of gardens, green-house, etc.—Sweetbrier is the name of my villa.”