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HomeMy WebLinkAboutSP202000013 Other - Nat Reg Hist Places 2020-07-21RPs ram ,aaw _ (Rfv. 4rrl y United States Department of the Interior v�L -J7 pil r f National Park Service Al i", �i V 7 N`j National Register of Historic Places Registration Form owra tauams This form is for use in nominating or requesting determinationa of eligibility for Individual properties or districts, See Instructions In Ouildwies for Compferfng Nadonef Regfater Forms (National Register Bulletin 18). Complete seen Item by marking "x" In the appropriate box or by entering the requested information. If an Item does not apply to the property being documented, enter "NU" for "not applicable." For functions, styles, f istanals, and areas of significance, enter only the oategoriea and subcategories listed In the Instructions. For additional space use continuation shaete (Form 10-900a). Type all entries. state Virginia coda VA county Albemarle code UO3 Zi0 coda 22924 Ownership of Property Category of P El private ® building(s) ❑ public -local ❑ district ❑ public -State ❑ site ❑ public -Federal ❑ structure ❑ object Name of related multiple property listing: N/A 4. State/Federal Agency Certification Contributing Noncontributing 20 3_ buildings 1 _0 sites 0 0 structures 0 0 objects 21 3 Total Number of contributing resources previously listed In the National Register 0 As the designated authority under the National Historic Preservation Act of 1960, as amended, I hereby certify that this ® nomination ❑ request for determination of eligibility meets the documentation standards for registering properties in the National Regi trot HI torI Pieces and meets the procedural and professional requirements set forth In 30 CFR Part 00. An my opinion he aYcperty L- 'real does not meet the National Register criteria. ❑So@ continuation sheet. FYI, 9h�< za Signature of cert(tyi g official bile State or Federal agency and bureau In my opinion, the property U meets ❑ does not most the National Register criteria. ❑ Sea continuation sheet. Signature of commenting or other official - Date State or Federal agency and bureau S. National Park Service Certification I, hereby, certify that this property is: ❑entered in the National Register. 17 See continuation sheet. ❑determined eligible for the National Register. ❑ See continuation sheet. ❑ determined not eligible for the National Register. ❑ removed from the National Register. ❑other, (explain:) Signature of the Keeper Data of Action Historic Functions (enter categories from instructions) TIC: SinEle dwelling Architectural Classification (enter categories from instructions) MID-19TH CENTURY: Greek Revival LATE VICTORIAN: Italianate IAM 191H AND 29M (MW REVIVALS: Cnlrrrial Revitral Describe present and historic physical appearance. SUMMARY ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION; Current Functions (enter categories from instructions) DOME SjTT .: Single dwelling DQMF.STTC, SernndaKy structures ACRT , 11.T11RF./S1JBSTSTENCF.: Animal fnri7ity OTHER: Equestrian facility (enter categories from instructions) foundation BRICK. STONE walls BRICK root ASPHALT, STONE: Slate other Wavertree Hall Farm is a 145-acre farm located on the south side Of Route 692 in the Greenwood -Batesville estate area of western .Albemarle County. The main house, with its central core dating from 1859, is a twc-story, hip -roofed brick building with a two-story pedimented portico, wide bracketed eaves in the Italianate style, and two chimneys at each gable end. There is a center door on the north facade with transom and sidelights and the windows have Greek Revival trim with plain corner blocks. The Interior of this portion features a center stair hall with two rooms on either side. The woodwork, featuring Greek Revival moldings around doors and windows with bulls -eye corner blocks, and Greek mantels, is largely original. The two 1 1/2 story brick wings on either side of the main block, as well as the dining room wing to the south, were added after 1913. Brickwork and window and door detailing are similar to the older section of the house. Interior woodwork is notable for the Adam -style mantels in the bedrooms and the dining room. The kitchen/pantry and servants wings, which consist of a T-plan, two-story brick wing to the south, were built after 1921. The property also contains a number of outbuildings, including an antebellum log slave house, several tenant houses, a pump house, chicken house, stable and barns, as well as an unusual underground room built into the north side of one of the garden terraces. ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION; Wavertree Hall Farm is a 145-acre farm located on the south side of Route 692 between Batesville and Greenwood in western Albemarle County. The surrounding area is characterized by several large horse and cattle farms. The landscape is gently rolling and is rural in character. The main house is reached by a long circular drive from Route 692 while the rest of the property is accessed by Kingsmill Road which_ bisects the farm ant, leads to a small subdivision (not part of the nominated property _9ft coPfirpl�pBty�jre9t. has considered the significance of this property in relation to other properties: ❑ nationally ❑ statewide 7 locally Applicable National Register Criteria QA ❑B F�C ❑D Criteria Considerations (Exceptions) ❑ A ❑ B ❑ C ❑ D ❑ E ❑ F ❑ G Areas of Significance (enter categories from instructions) Period of Significance ARCHITECTURE 1859-192, Cultural Affiliation NA Significant Dates 1859; 1913; 1921 Significant Person ArchitecVBullder NA Unknown State significance of property, and justify criteria, criteria considerations, and areas and periods of significance noted above. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE; The architecture of Wavertree Hall Farm spans nearly one hundred and fifty years and reflects several different periods of ownership. The central core of the main house dates from around 1859 and is a well-preserved example of Greek Revival and early Italianate architecture. It features a handsome pedimented portico, brickwork with penciled mortar joints, and much original Greek Revival woodwork in the interior. Two brick side wings with finely detailed masonry and elaborate Adam -style mantels were added around 1913 by Quincy Adams Shaw, the brother-in-law of Lady Astor. The rear wing, gardens and most of the agricultural and service outbuildings date from the ownership of Colonel Herman Danforth Newcomb, a native of Kentucky, who transformed Wavertree Hall Farm into one of the most important horse and cattle estates in western Albemarle County. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND; The earliest mention of the Wavertree Hall Farm tract is contained in the patent for several hundred acres issued to Charles Lambert in 1769. Some of this tract was sold off and combined with 340 acres bought by James Durette from the Wood and Woods families in April and July 1813. The price for both tracts, £2 per acre, indicates that these were unimproved tracts. 1 Durette, a native of Caroline County, grew tobacco and corn on his plantation and owned thirty-six slaves, five of whom were willed to his son James Durette, Jr., in 1B22, along with the farm. 2 Property tax records indicate there were small-scale improvements on the property, probably including a log cabin, that were never valued at more than $600 during the 1820-1850 period ® . s in continuation sheet 9. Major Blbllogrephical References Albemarle County Land Records, Charlottesville. Albemarle County Property Tax Records. Albemarle County Will Records. Grayson Family Papers, Manuscript #12567, University of Virginia Alderman Library, Charlottesville. Woods, Edgar. Albemarle Countv in Virginia. (Charlottesville: The Michie CompanyT—,-f761. Stevens, William T. Virginia House Tour.(Charlottesville: Stevenspost Publications), 1962. O'Dell, Jeff. "Wavertree Hall Farm". (Virginia Historic Landmarks Commission), 1983. Previous documentation on flit (NPS): ❑ preliminary determination of Individual listing (30 CFR 67) has been requested previously listed in the National Register previously determined eligible by the National Register designated a National Historic Landmark recorded by Historic American Buildings Survey N ❑recorded by Historic American Engineering Record M ❑ See continuation sheet AlImsry locstlon of additional data: State historic preservation office Other State agency Federal agency Local government University Other Specify repository: Va. Dept_ of Historic Resources 221 Governor St. Richmond 23219 10. Geographical Data Acreage of property acres UTM References A 1 ] 71 1 69, 81 a $01 1 421 0 9 34,0 B 17 161 M 11, 00 11 420 8 19 , 2, a Zone Easting Northing Zone Easting Northing c 1 li7l 1 61 971 7, 40t 1 420 8 18� 20 I D 1. 77 '61 9 77, 601 1 4210, 90,10 I :!See continuation sheet Verbal Boundary Description The nominated area comprises Parcels 39 and 39D of Albemarle County Tax Map 70, available in the Albemarle County Land Records, Deed Book 950, pages 185-186, and dated June 5, 1987. See continuation sheet Boundary Justification The boundaries of the nominated property encompass the main house, agricultural and service buildings, and surrounding grounds and pastures that have historically been a part of Wavertree Hall Farm and that maintain historic integrity. 11. Form Prepared By nameAltle Geeffrey Henry organization date street a number 1515 Rutled e Avenue telephone R04- 91-A006 city or town ar ottes7! e, state Va• zip code 22903 ♦U. SAM 198".223-91 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet Section number 7 Page The main house at Wavertree Hall Farm stands on a prominent rise and faces north. The outbuildings, consisting of tenant houses and agricultural service buildings, are arrayed to the south and west of the main house. The house is in good condition. The condition of the outbuildings, which number more than a dozen, range from good to deteriorated. The house is also surrounded by extensive and elaborate gardens and is almost obscured from the north by towering boxwoods. The main house was built in three stages: the center portion dates from 1859, while several wings were added in the 1910s and 1920s. The original 1859 part of the house is a two-story, three -bay, hipped -roof brick building with four chimneys, a wooden parapet on the roof, and wide eaves with regularly spaced brackets in the Italianate manner. Above the front entrance is a two-story pedimented portico with paired Doric columns and pilasters, an oval window in the pediment with Gibbs -style surround, and brick steps leading to the front boxwood hedges and brick walks. The portico is probably original although it may have been enlarged or repaired in the 1910s or 1920s. Mixed garden wall bond is used throughout except for the principal facade which is stretcher bond. The brick is pencilled along the mortar joints and the house has either a stepped or molded water table on all four facades. Windows are generally paired and have four -over -four sash, with paneled woodwork below them on the first story and a small ledge on the second story. All have simple Greek Revival surrounds with plain corner blocks. Above the entrance on the second story is a tri-partite, round -headed window with triple -hung sash, the middle window slightly taller in a modified Palladian window arrangement. The front door has a three -light transom and is flanked by tall sidelights. The interior features a wide center hall with two rooms on either side. The stair rises in two stages from the left-hand corner and features turned balusters and newel and a molded handrail. Floors, baseboards, woodwork, and doors are largely original, although the chair rail and crown molding are not. The mantels, executed in the Greek Revival style, are found in each of the eight rooms in the original part of the house. The front, left room on the first floor (now a library) features a mantel with bevelled edge shelf and three -sided pilasters with caps and bases. The paneled wainscote below the window ledge is not original. mh r" ,wro. nw Bowe,. 109 mM& United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet Section number 7 Page 2 Across the hall, the sitting room features a mantel with bevelled -edge shelf, and panelled frieze and pilasters. The brick hearth is also original, as are the floors and hardware. The left rear room, now an office, features woodwork and mantels similar to the library, while the right rear room has been partitioned into a butler's pantry and bathroom with early -twentieth century woodwork and moldings. Bedrooms on the second floor all have identical woodwork and mantelpieces. In addition, the door and window surrounds with their bulls -eye corner blocks, the molded baseboard, and floors are original. The next building phase occurred after the farm was sold to the Shaw family in 1913. The 1 1/2 story, gable -roofed brick wings with cornice returns, dormer windows, and gable -end chimneys were added on the east and west sides of the original house. Great care and expertise were expended to match both the brickwork and wood moldings of the two separate building periods. An unusual feature is the recessed brick rectangle above each window on the north facade. A two-story, five -bay wing, built to house the dining room and kitchen, was also added to the rear of the house. There are French doors leading to a patio to the east and a porch (probably once open but now enclosed) on the second story of the west facade. The dining room features floor -to -ceiling, built-in - shelves on the west wall and there is -a large Adam -style mantel at the north end. The two rooms in the west and east wings are also notable for the mantels decorated in the Adam style with characteristic swags, garlands and flowers. The 1920s additions nearly doubled the size of the house. It consists of a three -bay extension to the south with a perpendicular two-story, four -bay, gable -roofed wing with a south entrance. This was built to house servants, and still serves this function today. The rooms are considerably plainer and smaller than in the main living quarters. Brickwork and window moldings on the exterior are generally similar to that found in the two earlier building periods, but not as carefully matched. Beneath the house, according to former residents, is a tunnel which begins under the east wing and extends several hundred feet to the rear of the house, under the box gardens to emerge in the woods near a chicken coop. Part of this tunnel may have collapsed and is no longer accessible. my Fa," lwow United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet Section number 7 Page 3 Also of interest is the underground stone room, constructed shortly after 1913, at the northeast corner of the front yard. Defined by the stone wall which runs from the front -yard terrace, it contains a large fireplace and is lighted by two windows on the north. The wide doorway, also on the north contains two -leaf, vertical -board doors with large strap hinges; all openings have segmental -arched heads. The original function of this room is not known; it may have been used for parties or as a retreat. Wavertree Hall Farm contains a large collection of service and agricultural outbuildings. The oldest outbuilding is the one-story, two -room, log slave house with V-notched corners, brick and slate chinking, some original sash, and a massive stone center chimney and hearth. It is deteriorated condition. Next to that is a twentieth-century cinderblock garage. Further south is a large two-story, three -bay frame tenant house known as "the Hedges" which features a hipped roof, gable -end chimneys, and a one-story front porch. It appears to date from the turn of the century. There are also two smaller, gable -roofed, frame tenant houses on the west side of the road near the barns. The smaller and older of the two, perhaps mid -nineteenth century in date, stands closest to the road, and also may have served as a dairy. Other agricultural buildings include two one-story, multi -bay frame chicken houses , a small frame office with panelled doors, a corn crib, a frame pump house, two large frame barns and a smaler mule barn, a dairy, and three large horse stables with both brick and stone floors. The majority of these buildings date from the 1920s when Wavertree Hall Farm was greatly enlarged by the Newcomb family and became a well-known horse and cattle complex. Modern buildings, added by the present owner, include a horse barn with riding ring, a hay barn, and cow barn. The landscaping at Wavertree Hall Farm is quite extensive and was largely executed during the Newcomb ownership after 1921, although the deisgner is unfortunately not known. Several specimen and non-native trees are planted around the grounds and there are formal box parterres and terraces to the east and south of the house. The box walks and hedges may be older and are more than ten feet high in places. A vegetable and cutting garden are located southwest of the house. It is surrounded by a picket fence with posts topped by small stone acorns. The gardens are currently undergoing extensive restoration by the owner. NM A.. 1� OW AN pal ft 1�18 M44 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet Section number 7 Page INVENTORY OF RESOURCES, WAVERTREE HALL FARM 1-Mansion 2-Underground stone room 3-Garage 4-Log building 5-The Hedges - 6-Office 7 and 8-Hen houses 9-Tenant house 10-Tenant house 11. 12 and 13- Horse stalls 14-Horse Barn 15-Pump house 16-Corn Crib 17-Horse Barn 18 and 19-Mule barns 20-Barn 21-Garden INVENTORY OF NON-CONTRIBUTING RESOURCES: 1-Riding Ring 2-Hay barn 3-Cow Barn o Aepewi Ate ION4010 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet Section number 7 Page 5 Wavertree Hall Farm 145.3 acres KEY: A: Mansion and stone room B: Gange C: Log house D: The Hodges E: Office F: Henhouses . G: Tenant House H: Tenant House 1: Stable J: Stable K: Stable L: Hone bent M: Pump house N: Corncrib O: Cow ban (noncontnbuting) P: Mule bants Q: Ban R: Hay ban S: Riding ring (noncontributing) T: Bonn U: Gardens (Buildings not to scale) v L I T, M • Q Kr R N g NO- P.mS H 1 M, a NOT TO SCALE rv! senn ioaooa ON AANs. YVS a=S P" United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet Section number 8 Page 1 In 1852 James Durette sold the farm to William T. Grayson for $5,100. 4 Grayson (1830-1902) was a prominent tobacco farmer who married into the local Woods family. The Albemarle county land tax records for 1859 note $3,000 for "improvements, a brick house." The "mansion house" is shown in a plat for a neighboring tract in 1860, indicating that the present core of Wavertree Hall was completed around 1859-1860. 5 The original portion of Wavertree Hall is a well-preserved example of mid -nineteenth century Greek Revival architecture with several Italianate features and bears comparison with other houses from this period near Greenwood. One of -the most closely related is The Cedars on US Route 250, which was built in the 1850-1860 period. Like Wavertree Hall, The Cedars has penciled mortar joints, Greek architrave trim, somewhat exaggerated eaves, and a front portico. The floor plan and the design of the fireplace mantels and stair are also quite similar. The core of Alton Park (now known as Blue Ridge Farm), located directly west of Wavertree Hall Farm, also showed many similarities with wavertree Hall before it was nearly obliterated during a remodeling in the 1920s. Italianate features are confined mostly to exterior details, as the massing and interior woodwork are entirely Greek Revival. The heavy bracketed cornice, paired four -over -four windows and round -arched central tri-partite window are hallmarks of this style. Examples of true Italianate architecture are rare in Albemarle County and are largely confined to Charlottesville, although Ridgeway (built in 1809 but remodelled in the 1850s in a variant of this style) and Key West are notable exceptions. In 1913 the farm passed from the Grayson family to Quincy Adams Shaw, brother-in-law of the future Lady Astor, Nancy Langhorne. It was Shaw who added the two side wings and the dining room wing with the Adam -style mantels and delicate woodwork, as well as the underground garden room and tunnel. 6 During Shaw's tenure the farm became a popular sports and social center with polo grounds and steeplechase events; Shaw's son Churchill was Master of the Greenwood Hunt. The transformation of Wavertree Hall Farm after 1913 mirrored the change in the economic and social makeup of the Greenwood area after the turn of the century. Beginning in the 1890s many farms still owned by the descendants of the original families were w. F" 10 w or. mow aw ro:smm United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet Section number 8 Page 2 bought and upgraded by wealthy owners from outside of Virginia. Nancy Langhorne's father, Chiswell Dabney Langhorne, was one of the first to popularize the area when he moved there in the 1890s and greatly enlarged Mirador. Other socially prominent families soon followed, drawn to Greenwood by the cool summer climate and good train connections to Richmond, New York, and Chicago. The architectural legacy of these new owners was considerable. Several older houses were expanded considerably; Seven Oaks received a new portico, Blue Ridge Farm was greatly altered by the architect William Lawrence Bottomley in the 1920s and the frame Whilton was completely recovered in brick and transformed into a Georgian Revival house in the 1930s. Other owners chose to build new houses, sometimes by well-known architects, such as Rose Hill, again by Bottomley; Casa Maria, attributed to the landscape architect Charles Gillette, and Tiverton. Wavertree Hall Farm falls within the first category; the additions carried out during the twentieth century nearly doubled its size, while adding a certain grandeur lacking in the original structure. Wavertree Hall was further expanded after the property was sold in 1921 to Colonel Herman Danforth Newcomb. It was at this time that the farm was first known as Wavertree Hall. Newcomb, who died in 1962, was an alumnus of the University of Virginia Law School and was a native of Kentucky, where he returned to serve several terms as state senator. Newcomb was responsible for the addition of the rear wing at Wavertree hall, as well as nearly all the present farm buildings. This period in the farm's history was its most prosperous, and Wavertree was well-known throughout the state for its horse and cattle operations. Newcomb also transplanted numerous varieties of deciduous and evergreen trees, including many rare cedars that are native to Kentucky but not to this section of Virginia. The elaborate boxwood gardens and formal terraces have been likened to the gardens of landscape architect Charles Gillette, examples of which can be seen at nearby Rose Hill and Casa Maria. The heirs of Colonel Newcomb sold the estate to Christian Retreats, Inc. who operated it as a conference center and residence. The present owner has reestablished Wavertree Hall Farm as an important equestrian center, and is currently restoring the house and its gardens. NP0 F" 10404 aWN AA u M> 1O0*0018 lµl United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet Section number 8 Page 3 The terminal date of the period of significance, 1926, is taken from the date of a brochure announcing a horse auction at Wavertree. This suggests that Newcomb had completed his building program and had his equestrian enterprises in place. REFERENCES; 1-Deed Book 18, page 497. 2-Will Book 7, page 170. 3-Albemarle County Tax Records, 1820-1850. 4-Deed Book 51, page 76. 5-Albemarle County Tax Records, 1859. NM F m 1O00O1 OW Maw ea ION-W11 lM United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet Section number 10 Page 1 E/ 17 697 640 4209000 F/ 17 697 640 4208870 G/ 17 697 640 4208870 H/ 17 697 650 4208800 I/ 17 697 550 4208810 J/ 17 697 510 4208940 K/ 17 697 320 4208950 L/ 17 697 280 4208740 M/ 17 697 280 4209140 N/ 17 696 840 4209290 0/ 17 696 640 4209260 P/ 17 696 640 4209260 Q/ 17 696 810 4209420 R/ 17 696 810 4209460 S/ 17 696 800 4209550 T/ 17 697 100 4209580 U/ 17 697 140 9209640 NM ftfln 10410" cum Aw" ft 101*018 United States Department of the Interior Natlonal Park Service National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet Section number 10 Page 2 Hai 9 a u r"u I tio PHYSICAL SURVEY SH 0 w I N G 145.33 ACRES OF LAND - A PORTIONOF WAVERTREE HALL FARM SAMUEL MILLER MAGISTERIAL DISTRICT ALBEMARLE COUNTY, VIRGINIA•, Scale: 1'•3001 Jun• 5.1987 Additionit 7.0. 67 WM. M O R R I S FOSTER LAND SURVEYOR CHAR LOTTESVILLE• VA. A, x ♦ Nn Pam IMOW 00 APWDw Na 1ft*W11 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet Section number 0 Page 3 9.A. 4M1t � MA 950 =0 Its I 4 S?! i ' I \- �£',' 1 '`N,i j .I t\ t cem } I a „n. q c. 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Field checked 19fi5- Revised from aerial Field checked 1 lard surface improved surface photographs taken 1972. Field checked 1973 C 3acondery highway, Volyconic projection. 1927 North American datum li} Y1 ,ard surface- Unimproved road ____-__-= 10.000-foot rid based on Virginia coordinate B 8 system, south zone zs was 1 Interstate Route U. S. Route , State Route IODO-meter Universal Transverse Mercator grid ticks, zone 17, - shown in blue To place on the predicted North American Datum 1983 aTM GRID AM 1987 M ETK NORTH nwxe the projection lines 9 meters south and DECLINATION AT CENTER GE SHEET WAYNESBORO EAST, VA. 23 meters west as shown by dashed caner ticks 39078-A7-TF-024 Fine red dashed lines indisate selected fence and field lines where generally visible on aerial bholographs. This information is unchecked in rnnlwl,Ibnn 1973 FOR '