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Brooke Mansion (Birdsboro, Pennsylvania)

The Edward Brooke II Mansion (1887–88), also known as "Brookeholm," is a Queen Anne country house at 301 Washington Street in Birdsboro, Pennsylvania.[1]: 284  Designed by architect Frank Furness and completed in 1888, it was Edward Brooke II's wedding present to his bride, Anne Louise Clingan.[2]: 60 

Edward Brooke II Mansion
General information
Architectural styleQueen Anne
Address301 Washington Street
Town or cityBirdsboro, Pennsylvania
Coordinates40°15′38.2″N 75°48′44.7″W / 40.260611°N 75.812417°W / 40.260611; -75.812417
Construction started1887
Completed1888
Renovated1893
Technical details
Materialbrownstone block
wood shingles
Design and construction
Architect(s)Frank Furness
Architecture firmFurness, Evans & Company
Main contractorLevi H. Focht Company
Website
www.brookemansion.com

Five years later, Edward II himself designed a major addition to the mansion.[3]: 224  Following their parents' deaths, the Brooke children sold the property in the 1940s.[3]: 225  The mansion served as a nursing home for thirty years, and recently as a bed and breakfast.[3]: 225 

The property spent fourteen years on and off the real estate market, before being sold at auction on September 29, 2018, for $572,000.[4]

Brooke family edit

Birdsboro was named for ironmaker William Bird, who established a forge near the mouth of Hay Creek, about 1740.[5] In 1771, his son Marcus founded Hopewell Furnace, on Hay Creek about five miles upstream.[5] By the time of the Revolutionary War, Marcus Bird was the largest American producer of iron.[5][a] He cast iron cannon, shot and shell for the Continental Army, and served in the Pennsylvania Militia.[7] In the post-war depression he lost both forges to creditors in 1788.[5] The creditors hired John Louis Barde to operate the forges, and Barde purchased the Birdsboro forge in 1796.[5] He hired Matthew Brooke III to assist him, and after Barde's 1799 death Matthew continued to operate the forges for Barde's widow.[5] In 1800, Matthew's father and uncles formed Brooke & Buckley and bought the Hopewell forge, with Matthew's brother Clement in charge.[b] In 1805, at age 43, Matthew married Barde's 17-year-old daughter Elizabeth.[10]

Matthew and Elizabeth Brooke had five children: Anne Farmar (died young); Sarah Reese (died young); Edward (1816–1878); George (1818–1912); and Elizabeth Mary (1825–1870).[11] Matthew died in 1827 and Elizabeth in 1828, leaving their three orphaned children under the guardianship of Matthew's brother Clement. The Birdsboro forge was leased out to Brooke & Buckley until Edward and George attained their majorities. The Schuylkill Canal (completed 1825) passed through Birdsboro and, prior to railroads, was the primary means of transporting anthracite coal to Philadelphia and elsewhere.[12] The young brothers took charge of the business in 1837, and diversified its holdings.[c] They modernized the furnaces to run on anthracite (instead of charcoal), expanded their businesses, and consolidated them in 1867 as the Birdsboro Iron Forge Company.[12] The Reading Railroad and the Pennsylvania Railroad both built lines through Birdsboro. The Brookes were behind the building of the Wilmington & Northern Railroad, that connected to their iron ore mines in southern Berks County. This later became a subsidiary of the Reading Company, which extended it south to Wilmington, Delaware.[14] Edward served as the W & N's first president.[12] Following Elizabeth Mary Brooke's 1870 death,[d] the brothers bought out the interests of their late sister, and split their company into two entities – the E. & G. Brooke Land Company (coal and iron ore mines) and the E. & G. Brooke Iron Company (iron and steel manufacture).[5] The E. & G. Brooke Iron Company became Birdsboro Steel in 1905.[12]: 998 

Both Brooke brothers were keenly interested in architecture, and were clients of Frank Furness. Edward built a Greek Revival mansion, "Brooke Manor" (1844, demolished 1968) on a hill overlooking the town.[3] In the mid-1870s, he hired Furness to modernize and expand it.[16] George designed and oversaw construction of St. Michael's Episcopal Church, in the early 1850s.[e] Twenty years later, he did the same for its Sunday school building (1872–73), which he and his brother donated.[17]: 30–31  George designed his own Second Empire mansion, "Brookewood" (1860, burned 1917), and its many additions.[3]: 225  After Edward's 1878 death, George selected Furness to design a major expansion of St. Michael's Church, 1884–85.[1]: 262–63  This included the addition of transepts, a chancel and choir, a bell tower, and new church furniture (possibly executed by Daniel Pabst).[17]: 32  George again oversaw the project, and he and his family paid for the expansion.[17]: 33  The east transept was altered in 1887 for the installation of a Tiffany window,[18] a memorial to Edward from his widow, Annie Moore Clymer Brooke.[17]: 59–60 [f]

Edward Brooke II edit

 
Panoramic view of Birdsboro, 1890.

George Brooke married Mary Baldwin Irwin in 1862. They had two sons, Edward II, named for George's brother; and George Jr. The boys grew up in Philadelphia and Birdsboro, and were educated by private tutors.[20] The family had a Philadelphia city house at 924 Walnut Street, and the sons attended the nearby Delancey School.[13] Edward II graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 1886, and joined his father's iron and steel business.[13]

In an October 12, 1887, wedding at St. Michael's Church, Edward II married his second cousin, Anne Louise Clingan.[g] The groom gave the bride the not-quite-finished house as a wedding present:[h]

He is now engaged in building a magnificent mansion at a high elevation overlooking Birdsboro and the entire Schuylkill valley. He and his bride left on an extensive wedding tour to New York and the New England states. Upon their return they will reside with his father until their residence is completed, which will be some time in November.[22]

Edward and Anne Louise Brooke had four children:

  • George Brooke III (1888–1967), Berks County politician, aide to PA Gov. Gifford Pinchot, author of With the First City Troop on the Mexican Border (1917),[23] WWI veteran, married Virginia D. Muhlenberg Steininger, 1942, no children.[24]
  • Edward Brooke Jr. (1890–1976), secretary/treasurer of E. & G. Brooke Iron & Steel Company, married (1st) Helen F. Rieser, 1932, divorced 1938, (2nd) Mary E. Andrews, no children.[25]
  • Charles Clingham Brooke (1892–1975), lab chemist for E. & G. Brooke Iron & Steel Company, WWI veteran, married, divorced and remarried same woman, no children.[26]
  • Mary Baldwin Irwin Brooke (1897–1957), married Edward Lowber Stokes, 1920, 2 children.

Edward II succeeded his father as president of the E. & G. Brooke Iron Company and the Birdsboro Steel Foundry and Machine Company.[20] He served as president of the Pennsylvania Trust Company of Reading and the First National Bank of Birdsboro, and as a director of the Wilmington & Northern Railroad.[13]

Furness edit

About the time of Edward Brooke II's 1886 graduation, the University of Pennsylvania was contemplating building a fireproof library in which it could gather its collections in a single building.[1]: 290  Frank Furness's brother Horace was chosen to head the building committee, and the architect began drawing up detailed plans even before the project was officially announced.[1]: 291  The committee hired Furness to advise them, and later chose him to be the library's architect.[1]: 290–91 

Furness's earliest known drawing (c.1887) shows a plan and a massing of volumes close to the library as built—a stair tower separating vertical circulation from the reading room and stacks; a building featuring an apsidal north end with an arc of seminar rooms clustered around the base of the apse (like side chapels of a basilica).[27] When the university changed the library's proposed site from 36th & Spruce Streets to 34th & Locust Streets, Furness essentially redrew the plan as a mirror image.[1]: 290 

Furness used a similar plan and massing for his own country house, "Idlewild," with a U-shaped wrap-around porch taking the place of the arc of seminar rooms. As noted by architectural historian James F. O'Gorman: "For his own house in Media, [Furness] shrank the plan of the contemporary University Library, and erected over it a stone, brick, and shingle house."[28]

Furness used a similar plan and massing for the eastern half of Edward Brooke II's house, although the addition of a conical roof turned its apse into a tower.[29]

Exterior edit

Standing on a commanding site that overlooks the entire Schuylkill Valley and the Brooke Iron mills below, this is the most spectacular of the 1880s houses.
Here sculptural mass, rugged materials and a mountain site found an appropriate expression.
— George E. Thomas, Frank Furness: The Complete Works.[1]: 284 

Furness designed the front (north) façade of Brooke's house with two projecting bays—an eastern semicircular apse/tower with a J-shaped wrap-around porch, and a western two-and-a-half-story gabled bay. The exterior's whole first story was faced in brownstone block, and its upper stories were clad in wood shingles.[i] The porch's roof was carried on pyramidical brownstone-block piers with "eared" corbels.[2]: 58  The formal entrance was between the projecting bays (from the porch) through a pair of doors with intricately-patterned inset leaded-glass windows, sidelights and a semi-oval fanlight.[2]: 64–65  The carriage entrance was on the porch's east side, and featured a porte-cochère and steps leading to a side door with an inset beveled-glass window guarded by an intricate wrought iron grille.[30] Toward the south end, twin sets of French doors opened onto the porch.

The house's eastern half featured a shingled Mansard roof with shed-roofed dormers on three sides, two of them enclosing four windows each.[3]: 227  The tower featured twin paired windows on the second and third stories, the upper ones enclosed by conical-roofed dormers.[2]: 58  The tower's conical roof and the conical-roofed dormers were crowned by (copper?) finials (now weathered to verdigris).[2]: 58  Between the projecting bays, the second story was clad in brownstone block, with a large lunette window over the front doors.[2]: 58  The house's original western (now center) projecting bay featured large twin windows on the first story, and paired windows on the second and third stories. Its shingled front and sides curved outward in a skirt, and were carried on paired brownstone corbels.[2]: 58  As a decorative element, the shingles under its gable were cut to form concentric arcs. The house featured Furness's characteristic "upside-down" brick chimneys, that flared outward near the top.[31]

Through massing, architectural elements and variated windows, Furness expressed the house's interior spaces on its exterior.[1]: 284 

Interior edit

 
Hall chimneypiece

The house's plan was logical and efficient, with all of the first floor formal rooms opening onto a large L-shaped hall.[32] A round library (the base of the apse) was tucked into the angle of the "L."[33] It featured two large sash windows with curved windowseats, a recessed chimneypiece carved with flowers, and two curving built-in bookcases.[2]: 61  Opposite the library entrance was the hall's canted, floor-to-ceiling sandstone-and-oak chimneypiece. To the south was a long billiard room, with a carved-oak chimneypiece and twin French doors opening onto the porch. To the west (in the front) was the parlor, with a gray granite arched fireplace and Colonial Revival butternut overmantel.[34] To the west (in the rear), was the baronial dining room, with an iron shingle-roofed Modern Gothic mantel,[35] reportedly cast at the family's foundry.[2]: 63  The hall, billiard room, and dining room were paneled in coffered oak wainscoting,[2]: 62  and their ceilings were circumscribed by oak beams, each in a different pattern.[3]: 228, 232–33  The beams of the round library's ceiling formed a compass rose.[3]: 229  The grand stairway climbed along the hall's south wall, turned left to form a gallery over the carriage entrance, and turned again along the north wall before reaching the second floor. The hall was lighted by a row of four tall windows above the gallery, that also lighted the upper hall.[36]

The second floor followed a similar plan as the first, with four large bedrooms opening onto an extended upper hall.[2]: 64  A dressing room between each pair of bedrooms allowed for discrete access by servants. The third floor featured a central lobby, illuminated by a large frosted-glass skylight and surrounded by seven rooms. These included a round nursery (in the tower), a long southeast bedroom (with dressing room), servant rooms, and storage.[2]: 64  One of the house's ingenious features was the windowless back staircase, that climbed from the basement kitchen to the third floor.[3]: 225  Light from the skylight in the roof was able to reach the basement level. The back staircase "permit[ted] servants access to various sections of the house without having to pass through formal rooms."[3]: 225 

Mrs. Brooke loved flowers, and the house was decorated with examples in wood, stone, glass and iron. The leaded glass panels of the front doors, sidelights and fanlight were crowded with stylized plant forms.[37] The screen between the vestibule and hall featured seven wrought iron window grilles in the form of abstracted sunflowers.[38] The hall chimneypiece featured an arched panel of carved-sandstone flowers above the firebox, oak corbels carved with oversized dahlias supporting the mantel shelf, and an oak frieze of abstracted flowers crowning the whole.[39] The newel post was carved with a plump oak floral garland, which was echoed in miniature elsewhere in the hall.[40] The billiard room chimneypiece featured a frieze of hibiscus carved in sandstone flanked by oversized garlands carved in oak.[41] Carved vines intertwined though the rough-cut granite of the parlor fireplace, and flowers and garlands accented the butternut overmantel above it. The Japanese-inspired decoration of the library chimneypiece featured sunflower corbels supporting the mantel shelf, a vividly-carved frieze of camellias below the mirror, and wispy clusters of vines dangling from above.[42] The parlor's windowseat featured twin leaded-glass windows, each embellished with a stained-glass floral garland and Mrs. Brooke's first initial, "A."

1893 addition edit

Edward Brooke II expanded the house by about 40% to its current size in 1893.[3]: 224  The contractor was Levi H. Focht, who had constructed the house five years earlier, and had constructed Furness's additions to St. Michael's Church nine years earlier.[3]: 224  Acting as his own architect,[j] Edward II added a third projecting bay to the front façade, turning the original western bay into a center bay and connecting all three bays with a wide terrace. The addition brought the kitchen out of the basement, and added a second set of back stairs and a rope-pulled elevator, operated using counterweights (like a dumbwaiter).[3]: 224  "[T]he western section was constructed for food preparation, general storage, servant's quarters, and the like."[3]: 224 

The expansion had minor effects on the first floor formal rooms—the parlor's box window became a short hallway to the new addition; the old butler's pantry became a study (off the billiard room); and two of the dining room's doorways (and perhaps the double window) were moved. It had a larger effect on the second floor—three of the four bedrooms were cut down in size: two to install bathrooms, and the third for a hallway to the new addition.[3]: 224  On the exterior, the alterations required the moving of existing windows and the installation of new windows for the bathrooms. Through the expansion Edward II's large house became a mansion of nearly 14,000 square feet.[43]

The 1890 census listed five live-in servants in the household, but the number increased following the 1893 expansion.[2]: 63  The mansion was illuminated by gaslight until the installation of electricity in 1896.[3]: 224  Telephone service arrived in 1904.[3]: 224 

Carriage house edit

Edward II's passion was horses, both racehorses and carriage horses.[44] He kept a stable of twelve, and exercised them on a racetrack at the top of the hill.[44] He was a founding member of the Philadelphia Four-in-Hand Club, organized by Fairman Rogers in 1890,[45] and competed in the annual 3-day carriage marathon from New York City to Philadelphia.[k] In 1898, Edward II designed and built an enormous 2-story carriage house (with elevator) southwest of the mansion.[47] His collection grew to twenty-four carriages, and included "buggies, surreys, broughams, a pony cart and an Irish jaunting cart in which a person had to sit sideways."[44] "After a particular vehicle had been used, it was brought into the carriage house, thoroughly cleaned and then taken to the second floor on a hand-operated lift to be readied for the next ride."[44] Most of the carriages were sold to the National Park Service in 1941.[l] The carriage house burned in the 1970s.

The short hallway between the mansion's hall and dining room featured a special closet for Edward II's top hat, whip and tack.[3]: 225  Coaching paintings and prints and equestrian bronzes decorated many of the rooms.[3]: 228, 232–34, 236–37 

20th century edit

 
Detail of 1890 panoramic view of Birdsboro. "Brookewood," George Brooke's mansion and stables are left, Edward Brooke II's mansion (prior to its 1893 expansion) is right.

George Brooke's mansion, "Brookewood," and his son Edward II's mansion, "Brookeholm," stood side by side on the hill sharing a 34-acre estate.[3]: 225  George Brooke died at 93, on January 15, 1912, two years after his wife. He bequeathed his half-share in all the Birdsboro companies to his two sons, and "Brookewood" to George Jr.[20] Following George Jr.'s 1914 marriage to Titanic survivor Lucile Carter, the newlyweds and Carter's two children from her previous marriage split their time between his family's Philadelphia city house, her house in Bryn Mawr, and "Brookewood."[3]: 225  George and Lucile Brooke had one child together, the flamboyant Elizabeth Muhlenberg Brooke.[m] The family was in Birdsboro for Christmas, 1917, when "Brookewood" burned, "the result of Christmas tree candles igniting nearby curtains."[3]: 225  "Firemen were unable to save the house because it was so cold that the source of water supply was frozen."[44] The couple bought "Clingan," just west of Birdsboro, that had been the home of sister-in-law Anne Louise Clingan Brooke's family.[50] Lucile Carter Brooke died of a heart attack, October 26, 1934.[51] George Jr. survived her by 19 years, living in a suite at Philadelphia's Barclay Hotel on Rittenhouse Square, or at "Clingan."[52]

 
Catharine Schaeffer Muhlenberg (c.1790) by Joseph Wright, on loan to The Speaker's House, Trappe, Pennsylvania.
 
Frederick Augustus Conrad Muhlenberg (1790) by Joseph Wright, National Portrait Gallery, Washington, D.C.

Following his parents' deaths, Edward II inherited Joseph Wright's 1790 Portrait of Frederick Muhlenberg, the first Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, and a great-great-grandfather on his mother's side.[53] Edward II made the portrait the centerpiece of his mansion's parlor.[3]: 230  George Jr. inherited the pendant portrait of the Speaker's wife, Catharine Schaeffer Muhlenberg.[n] The Frederick Muhlenberg portrait is now in the collection of the National Portrait Gallery.[o]

Anne Louise Clingan Brooke died of pneumonia, September 5, 1935.[57] A month earlier, she had sold 3,780 acres of land (5.9 square miles) – inherited from her maternal grandfather, Clement Brooke – to the federal government. This became Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site and part of Hopewell Big Woods.[57] In her will, she bequeathed "Brookeholm" to her husband—it had been his wedding present to her 48 years earlier.[3]: 225  Her obituary listed sons George III and Charles living at home, and Edward Jr. (now married) living in a house on the estate.[57]

Edward Brooke II survived his wife by five years, dying at 77, on November 20, 1940.[20] He slipped and fell into a half-filled bathtub of scalding water, and died of burns at Reading Hospital.[20] His viewing was held at the mansion: "Last evening hundreds of friends and former associates in various organizations filed through the drawing room of the Brooke residence to pay their last respects."[58] His obituary listed sons George III, Edward Jr. (now divorced)[59] and Charles living at home.[20] George III served as executor for his father's estate, which took several years to settle.[3]: 224  In 1942, at age 54, George III married widow Virginia Muhlenberg, an artist and interior designer, and a distant cousin.[24] She and her two daughters moved into the mansion with him (and his two brothers and seven servants).[3]: 224 [p] George and Virginia Muhlenberg Brooke settled in Wyomissing, a wealthy suburb of Reading, several miles upriver from Birdsboro.[44] He served as a delegate to the 1944 Republican National Convention,[61] and remained active in Berks County politics until his death in 1967.[24] His brothers retired to Daytona Beach, Florida.[25]

The mansion and its contents were sold at auction in 1944.[62] The property was purchased by a group of four partners, including E. Raymond Mohr, a local funeral director, and rented out for special events.[63]

Nursing home edit

Registered nurse Elizabeth J. Spanier purchased the mansion in 1948, and converted it into the Spanier Convalescent Home.[64] Aided by her sister-in-law, also an RN, Spanier operated the facility for thirty years.[64] Conversion into a nursing home did not affect the first floor formal rooms, but interior alterations were made to the second and third floors. Spanier put the mansion on the market in 1978 for $500,000.[44]

 
 
Brooke Mansion amidst the Mansion Heights housing development, 2020

The mansion was purchased by a group of five partners, who planned a housing development for the property. They subdivided the 34 acre former estate, leaving the mansion on a 3-acre lot, and obtained a variance rezoning the mansion as a commercial property.[65]

The former Brooke Mansion in Birdsboro, believed to be one of the largest residences ever constructed in Berks County, will become the center of the Mansion Heights development being marketed by Park Road Realtors. The owner/developers of the project are Pat Kraras, Mauro Cammarano, Gus Kraras, Chris Kraras, and Daniel Casciano IV. The former Brooke Mansion, will be offered for sale to be restored for either commercial or professional purposes. The mansion contains 33 rooms, 19 bedrooms, eight baths, and 10 fireplaces. The community plan for the development calls for 84 wooded, quarter-acre residential lots surrounding the mansion. The estate is the last prime residential ground available for development in Birdsboro, developers said.[66]

Bed & breakfast edit

The mansion remained unoccupied for more than a decade, as the housing development was built around it.[67] Carmelo Leggio, owner of a pair of local pizza restaurants, purchased it in 1989 for $450,000.[68] He made significant repairs to the interior and exterior, and added a new roof.[3]: 225  He planned to open a gourmet restaurant on the mansion's first floor, decorated with his collection of Victorian antiques, and to operate a bed and breakfast using the bedrooms of the upper floors.[68] The gourmet restaurant plans fell apart when his efforts to obtain a liquor license were blocked by strong neighborhood opposition.[68] Leggio went ahead with the bed and breakfast, which opened in Spring 1992.[69] In May and June 1993, a local Tae Kwon Do instructor, Dan Glutz, rented a portion of the 4th made and was arrested for having sex with an under-aged teenage girl.[70] The ensuing legal trouble and negative publicity caused Leggio to abandon his plans for the mansion, coupled with the a failed investment where he was scammed out of thousands of dollars.[3]: 225  Vacant, it suffered vandalism and fell into foreclosure.[71]

Peter and Marci Xenias bought the mansion in 1994 for $325,000.[43] They reopened it as a bed and breakfast, which they operated for close to a decade.[72] The property was for sale in May 2018 for $1,640,000.[43]

Open house and auction edit

 
Line for the May 20, 2018 open house.

On May 20, 2018, the Xenias family lent their mansion for a one-day open house.[73] The Women's Club of Birdsboro conducted guided tours as a fund-raiser for local community organizations and scholarships.[73] Some 857 people waited in line and paid $10 each to tour the mansion.[73]

Horst Auctioneers conducted an on-site sale of the property on September 29, 2018.[74] A couple from Toronto, Canada, Vineet and Twisha Talpade, purchased it for $572,000, and announced that they intend to restore the mansion to its former glory.[4]

Notes edit

  1. ^ With 14 enslaved Africans, Marcus Bird was also the largest slaveholder in Berks County in 1780.[6]
  2. ^ Brooke & Buckley was a partnership among brothers Matthew Brooke Jr. and Thomas Brooke, and brother-in-law Daniel Buckley.[8] The company used indentured and free labor, both black and white, and paid the blacks the same wage as the whites. The large turnover in black workers may indicate that some were fugitive slaves, earning money for their journey north to freedom in Canada.[9]
  3. ^ "On April 1, 1837, [George] and his brother Edward succeeded their father in business, the output of which at that time amounted to only 200 tons annually. In 1840 they added a charcoal furnace in order to use their wood in the manufacture of pig iron instead of operating the forges. In 1848 and 1849 a rolling mill and nail factory were added. In 1852 Anthracite Furnace No. 1 was built, and in 1870 and 1873 two more furnaces were added, and capacity of the plant increased from time to time, until the annual output exceeded 100,000 tons of pig iron, 250,000 kegs of nails, besides much bar and skelp iron. In connection with their furnaces, the brothers acquired a one-half interest in the Warwick and Jones mines, whence the greater part of their ore is taken, the Wilmington & Northern railroad connecting the furnaces and mines." page 999.[13]
  4. ^ Elizabeth Mary Brooke became the first wife of U.S. Congressman Hiester Clymer. pages 998–99.[13] Both of their children died young.[15]
  5. ^ The three Brooke siblings paid for construction of St. Michael's Episcopal Church (1851–53). Prior to that, services had been held in local school buildings. page 26.[17]
  6. ^ Edward Brooke was 52 when he married 18-year-old Annie Moore Clymer in 1868. At his death in 1878, they had four young children, ages 2 to 8.[15] Annie Moore Clymer Brooke outlived him by nearly 50 years. In 1890, she married Rev. Randolph McKim, rector of the Church of the Epiphany in Washington, D.C.[19]
  7. ^ Anne Louise Clingan had been born at nearby Hopewell Furnace, which she later inherited. She was the granddaughter of Clement Brooke, the uncle who had been guardian to George Brooke and his siblings in the 1820s and '30s.[21]
  8. ^ It seems reasonable to presume that George Brooke paid for construction of the house. His son, Edward II, was barely a year out of college. Foster writes: "Edward Brooke II married in 1887, and his family commissioned Frank Furness to design a grand house" (emphasis added). page 60.[2]
  9. ^ Foster writes: [T]he upper floors are shingled in mahogany (for durability, and nearly all the originals are intact and in place). page 60.[2]
  10. ^ "[Edward Brooke II] has well developed and practical ideas of architectural beauty and proportion, as exemplified in the new addition to his house at Birdsboro, which he planned and supervised personally, working out the details with an economy of space and exhibition of practical skill that would do credit to the experienced builder."[13]
  11. ^ Held on a spring weekend, the New York City to Philadelphia marathon was a 3-day, 200-mile point-to-point race with stops every 8 to 10 miles. The coaches and teams left Manhattan early on a Saturday morning, and arrived in Philadelphia 11 to 12 hours later. After resting the horses and drivers on Sunday, they repeated the timed 100-mile return trip on Monday.[46]
  12. ^ Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site purchased nineteen of Edward Brooke II's antique carriages in 1941. They were displayed in the site's Barn into the 1950s. Most of them were transferred in 1964 to the Staten Island Historical Society's carriage museum.[48]
  13. ^ "Betty" Brooke Blake was married 5 times, twice widowed and 3 times divorced. She settled in Dallas, Texas in 1943, where she opened a modern art gallery in 1951, and lived the rest of her life.[49]
  14. ^ Scholars long presumed that the Catharine Schaeffer Muhlenberg portrait had been lost in the 1917 burning of "Brookewood."[54] But the portrait was rediscovered in 2017 in the attic of Elizabeth Muhlenberg Brooke Blake's house in Newport, Rhode Island, following her 2016 death (at age 100).[54] Mrs. Blake had been a benefactor of the Frederick Muhlenberg House in Trappe, Pennsylvania, and her sons placed the portrait on long-term loan to the house museum.[54]
  15. ^ Virginia Muhlenberg Brooke, widow of George Brooke III, also was a descendant of Frederick Muhlenberg.[54] She lent the Speaker's portrait to the National Portrait Gallery for its 1968 inaugural exhibition in the Old Patent Office Building,[55] and sold it to the Smithsonian in 1974.[56]
  16. ^ Virginia Muhlenberg Brooke's elder daughter Nancy was married at the mansion in 1944.[60]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h George E. Thomas, et al., Frank Furness: The Complete Works, (New York: Princeton Architectural Press, revised 1996), pp. 284–86.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Janet W. Foster, "Edward Brooke House, Birdsboro, Pennsylvania," The Queen Anne House: America's Victorian Vernacular, (New York: Abrams, 2006, pp. 56–65).
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab George M. Meiser and Gloria Jean Meiser, "The Birdsboro Mansion of Edward and Anne Brooke," The Passing Scene, Volume 13, (Reading, PA: Historical Society of Berks County, 2005), pp. 224–39.
  4. ^ a b Tony Phyrillas, "Brooke Mansion sold for $572,000," The Mercury, September 30, 2018.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Birdsboro Steel Foundry and Machine Company employee records, from University of Pennsylvania Archives.
  6. ^ African-Americans at Hopewell Furnace, from National Park Service.
  7. ^ Hopewell Furnace in the American Revolution, from National Park Service.
  8. ^ Joseph E. Walker, "Negro Labor in the Charcoal Iron Industry of Southeastern Pennsylvania," The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, vol. 92, no. 4 (October 1969), Historical Society of Pennsylvania, p. 476, n. 49.
  9. ^ Reading 3: the Hopewell Village Community, from National Park Service.
  10. ^ George Norbury Mackenzie, Colonial Families of the United States of America, Volume 6, (Baltimore: The Seaforth Press, 1917), p. 102.
  11. ^ Charles Farmar Billopp, A History of Thomas and Anne Farmar, and Some of their Descendants in America (New York: The Grafton Press, 1907), p. 84.
  12. ^ a b c d G. Clymer Brooke, Birdsboro: Company with a Past, Built to Last, (New York: Newcomen Society in North America, 1959).
  13. ^ a b c d e f John Woolf Jordan, Encyclopedia of Pennsylvania Biography, Volume 3, (Lewis Historical Publishing Company, 1914), pp. 1001–03.
  14. ^ Morton L. Montgomery, History of Berks County in Pennsylvania (Philadelphia: Everts, Peck & Richards, 1886), p. 895.
  15. ^ a b Henry Melchior Muhlenberg Richards, "Genealogy of the Hiester Family," Pennsylvania-German Genealogies; Proceedings and Addresses, Volume 16, (Lancaster, PA: The Pennsylvania-German Society, 1907), pp. 40–41.
  16. ^ Brooke Manor House, from HABS.
  17. ^ a b c d e Daniel K. Miller, The History of St. Michael's Protestant Episcopal Church, Birdsboro, Pennsylvania, (St. Michael's Episcopal Church, 1951).
  18. ^ Edward Brooke Memorial Window, from Alarmy.
  19. ^ Annie Moore Clymer McKim, from Church of the Epiphany.
  20. ^ a b c d e f "Edward Brooke Sr. Dies From Burns," The Reading Eagle, November 21, 1940, p. 1.
  21. ^ "Death claims Mrs. Brooke in Phila hospital," The Reading Times, September 7, 1935, p. 2.
  22. ^ "Brooke–Clingan; Largely Attended Wedding Near Birdsboro." The Reading Eagle, October 12, 1887, p. 1.
  23. ^ With the First City Troop on the Mexican Border, from New York Public Library.
  24. ^ a b c "Virginia Brooke, artist, designer," The Reading Eagle, November 2, 1999, p. B-6.
  25. ^ a b "Edward Brooke, Jr.," The Daytona Beach Morning Journal, April 20, 1976, p. 3A.
  26. ^ "Charles C. Brooke," The Daytona Beach Morning Journal, December 10, 1975, p. 9B.
  27. ^ George E. Thomas, Frank Furness: Architecture in the Age of the Great Machines, (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2018). ISBN 0812249526
  28. ^ James F. O'Gorman, The Architecture of Frank Furness, (Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1973), p. 64.
  29. ^ East façade, from brookemansion.com
  30. ^ Porch and side door, from oldhouses.com
  31. ^ Ellen Zeiper, "Frank Furness: An Eclectic Architect's Chimney Designs," American Art & Antiques, vol. 1, no. 3 (November–December 1978), pp. 62–69.
  32. ^ Floor plans 2018-02-15 at the Wayback Machine, from phillycurbed.com
  33. ^ Library, from brookemansion.com
  34. ^ Parlor, from brookemansion.com
  35. ^ Dining room, from brookemansion.com
  36. ^ Stairway, from alllehighvalleyhomes.com
  37. ^ Front doors, from brookemansion.com
  38. ^ Vestibule, from oldhouses.com
  39. ^ Chimneypiece, from alllehighvalleyhomes
  40. ^ Newel post, from alllehighvalleyHomes.com
  41. ^ Billiard room fireplace & overmantel, from lisatigerhomes.com
  42. ^ Library chimneypiece, from lisatigerhomes.com
  43. ^ a b c 301 Washington St, Birdsboro, PA, from Zillow.
  44. ^ a b c d e f g Matt Romanski, "Brooke Mansion Is a Monument to Bygone Era," The Reading Eagle, December 24, 1978, pp. 12–13.
  45. ^ Fairman Rogers, Manual of Coaching (Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott Company, 1900), p. 511.[1]
  46. ^ Elizabeth Toomey Seabrook, "Coaching in America," The Carriage Journal, vol. 2, no. 4 (Spring 1965), pp. 116–18.
  47. ^ "Elegant Stable to be erected by Edward Brooke," The Reading Eagle, October 8, 1898, p. 2.
  48. ^ Leah Glaser, Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site – Administrative History (Northeast Region History Program, National Park Service, August 2005), pp. 244–46.PDF
  49. ^ Rob Brinkley, "The woman who brought contemporary art (and Picasso) to Dallas," The Dallas Morning News, March 28, 2012.
  50. ^ "Historical society hopes to stall plan to demolish mansion," The Reading Eagle, June 13, 2005.
  51. ^ "Obituary: Mrs. George Brooke". The New York Times. October 27, 1934.
  52. ^ "George Brooke, Retired Iron Merchant," The Philadelphia Evening Bulletin, August 14, 1953.
  53. ^ Henrietta Meier Oakley and J. C. Schwab, The Muhlenberg Album, (New Haven, CT: Tuttle Press, 1910).[2]
  54. ^ a b c d Lisa Minardi, "Rediscovering the Muhlenberg Family," Antiques & Fine Art, vol. 17, no. 2 (Summer 2018), pp. 110–15.
  55. ^ J. Benjamin Townsend, This New Man: A Discourse on Portraits, (Smithsonian Institution Press, 1968), pp. 64–65.
  56. ^ Frederick Augustus Conrad Muhlenberg, from National Portrait Gallery.
  57. ^ a b c "Mrs. Edward Brooke Dies at Age of 71," The Reading Eagle, September 6, 1935, p. 1.
  58. ^ "Edward Brooke Funeral Held in Birdsboro," The Reading Eagle, November 23, 1940, p. 1.
  59. ^ "Mrs. Helen F. Brooke Files Suit for Divorce," The Reading Eagle, August 6, 1939, p. 2.
  60. ^ Obituary: "Virginia (Steininger) Lawson," The Reading Eagle, June 14, 2019.
  61. ^ George Brooke III, from politicalgraveyard.com
  62. ^ The Reading Eagle, January 28, 1992., p. A-1.
  63. ^ "Outing Held by Officials," The Reading Eagle, August 16, 1947, p. B-6.
  64. ^ a b "Elizabeth J. Spanier, Former Administrator," The Reading Eagle, November 17, 1992, p. C-3.
  65. ^ "Birdsboro Conversion Opposed," The Reading Eagle, November 13, 1990, p. 24.
  66. ^ "Brooke Mansion set to be developed," The Reading Eagle, June 2, 1985, p. C-17.
  67. ^ Stephanie Caltagirone, "Brooke Mansion sets open house," The Reading Eagle, April 3, 1992., p. W-3.
  68. ^ a b c Peter L. DeCoursey, "Plans for mansion draw flak," The Reading Times, November 16, 1990, pp. 25–26.
  69. ^ Peter L. DeCoursey, "Brooke Mansion sets open house," The Reading Times, April 3, 1992.
  70. ^ "Glutz was Sentence in Sex Case," The Morning Call, July 1, 1995.
  71. ^ "Restored Brooke Mansion bridges centuries," AAA World Magazine, September/October 1996, pp. 16–17, American Automobile Association.
  72. ^ Brooke Mansion website.
  73. ^ a b c Jeremy Long, "People line up to see inside of Brooke Mansion in Birdsboro," The Reading Eagle, May 21, 2018.
  74. ^ Historic Brooke Mansion, from Horst Auctioneers.

brooke, mansion, birdsboro, pennsylvania, edward, brooke, mansion, 1887, also, known, brookeholm, queen, anne, country, house, washington, street, birdsboro, pennsylvania, designed, architect, frank, furness, completed, 1888, edward, brooke, wedding, present, . The Edward Brooke II Mansion 1887 88 also known as Brookeholm is a Queen Anne country house at 301 Washington Street in Birdsboro Pennsylvania 1 284 Designed by architect Frank Furness and completed in 1888 it was Edward Brooke II s wedding present to his bride Anne Louise Clingan 2 60 Edward Brooke II MansionGeneral informationArchitectural styleQueen AnneAddress301 Washington StreetTown or cityBirdsboro PennsylvaniaCoordinates40 15 38 2 N 75 48 44 7 W 40 260611 N 75 812417 W 40 260611 75 812417Construction started1887Completed1888Renovated1893Technical detailsMaterialbrownstone blockwood shinglesDesign and constructionArchitect s Frank FurnessArchitecture firmFurness Evans amp CompanyMain contractorLevi H Focht CompanyWebsitewww wbr brookemansion wbr com Five years later Edward II himself designed a major addition to the mansion 3 224 Following their parents deaths the Brooke children sold the property in the 1940s 3 225 The mansion served as a nursing home for thirty years and recently as a bed and breakfast 3 225 The property spent fourteen years on and off the real estate market before being sold at auction on September 29 2018 for 572 000 4 Contents 1 Brooke family 1 1 Edward Brooke II 2 Furness 2 1 Exterior 2 2 Interior 3 1893 addition 3 1 Carriage house 4 20th century 4 1 Nursing home 4 2 Bed amp breakfast 5 Open house and auction 6 Notes 7 ReferencesBrooke family editBirdsboro was named for ironmaker William Bird who established a forge near the mouth of Hay Creek about 1740 5 In 1771 his son Marcus founded Hopewell Furnace on Hay Creek about five miles upstream 5 By the time of the Revolutionary War Marcus Bird was the largest American producer of iron 5 a He cast iron cannon shot and shell for the Continental Army and served in the Pennsylvania Militia 7 In the post war depression he lost both forges to creditors in 1788 5 The creditors hired John Louis Barde to operate the forges and Barde purchased the Birdsboro forge in 1796 5 He hired Matthew Brooke III to assist him and after Barde s 1799 death Matthew continued to operate the forges for Barde s widow 5 In 1800 Matthew s father and uncles formed Brooke amp Buckley and bought the Hopewell forge with Matthew s brother Clement in charge b In 1805 at age 43 Matthew married Barde s 17 year old daughter Elizabeth 10 Matthew and Elizabeth Brooke had five children Anne Farmar died young Sarah Reese died young Edward 1816 1878 George 1818 1912 and Elizabeth Mary 1825 1870 11 Matthew died in 1827 and Elizabeth in 1828 leaving their three orphaned children under the guardianship of Matthew s brother Clement The Birdsboro forge was leased out to Brooke amp Buckley until Edward and George attained their majorities The Schuylkill Canal completed 1825 passed through Birdsboro and prior to railroads was the primary means of transporting anthracite coal to Philadelphia and elsewhere 12 The young brothers took charge of the business in 1837 and diversified its holdings c They modernized the furnaces to run on anthracite instead of charcoal expanded their businesses and consolidated them in 1867 as the Birdsboro Iron Forge Company 12 The Reading Railroad and the Pennsylvania Railroad both built lines through Birdsboro The Brookes were behind the building of the Wilmington amp Northern Railroad that connected to their iron ore mines in southern Berks County This later became a subsidiary of the Reading Company which extended it south to Wilmington Delaware 14 Edward served as the W amp N s first president 12 Following Elizabeth Mary Brooke s 1870 death d the brothers bought out the interests of their late sister and split their company into two entities the E amp G Brooke Land Company coal and iron ore mines and the E amp G Brooke Iron Company iron and steel manufacture 5 The E amp G Brooke Iron Company became Birdsboro Steel in 1905 12 998 Both Brooke brothers were keenly interested in architecture and were clients of Frank Furness Edward built a Greek Revival mansion Brooke Manor 1844 demolished 1968 on a hill overlooking the town 3 In the mid 1870s he hired Furness to modernize and expand it 16 George designed and oversaw construction of St Michael s Episcopal Church in the early 1850s e Twenty years later he did the same for its Sunday school building 1872 73 which he and his brother donated 17 30 31 George designed his own Second Empire mansion Brookewood 1860 burned 1917 and its many additions 3 225 After Edward s 1878 death George selected Furness to design a major expansion of St Michael s Church 1884 85 1 262 63 This included the addition of transepts a chancel and choir a bell tower and new church furniture possibly executed by Daniel Pabst 17 32 George again oversaw the project and he and his family paid for the expansion 17 33 The east transept was altered in 1887 for the installation of a Tiffany window 18 a memorial to Edward from his widow Annie Moore Clymer Brooke 17 59 60 f Edward Brooke II edit nbsp Panoramic view of Birdsboro 1890 George Brooke married Mary Baldwin Irwin in 1862 They had two sons Edward II named for George s brother and George Jr The boys grew up in Philadelphia and Birdsboro and were educated by private tutors 20 The family had a Philadelphia city house at 924 Walnut Street and the sons attended the nearby Delancey School 13 Edward II graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 1886 and joined his father s iron and steel business 13 In an October 12 1887 wedding at St Michael s Church Edward II married his second cousin Anne Louise Clingan g The groom gave the bride the not quite finished house as a wedding present h He is now engaged in building a magnificent mansion at a high elevation overlooking Birdsboro and the entire Schuylkill valley He and his bride left on an extensive wedding tour to New York and the New England states Upon their return they will reside with his father until their residence is completed which will be some time in November 22 Edward and Anne Louise Brooke had four children George Brooke III 1888 1967 Berks County politician aide to PA Gov Gifford Pinchot author of With the First City Troop on the Mexican Border 1917 23 WWI veteran married Virginia D Muhlenberg Steininger 1942 no children 24 Edward Brooke Jr 1890 1976 secretary treasurer of E amp G Brooke Iron amp Steel Company married 1st Helen F Rieser 1932 divorced 1938 2nd Mary E Andrews no children 25 Charles Clingham Brooke 1892 1975 lab chemist for E amp G Brooke Iron amp Steel Company WWI veteran married divorced and remarried same woman no children 26 Mary Baldwin Irwin Brooke 1897 1957 married Edward Lowber Stokes 1920 2 children Edward II succeeded his father as president of the E amp G Brooke Iron Company and the Birdsboro Steel Foundry and Machine Company 20 He served as president of the Pennsylvania Trust Company of Reading and the First National Bank of Birdsboro and as a director of the Wilmington amp Northern Railroad 13 Furness editAbout the time of Edward Brooke II s 1886 graduation the University of Pennsylvania was contemplating building a fireproof library in which it could gather its collections in a single building 1 290 Frank Furness s brother Horace was chosen to head the building committee and the architect began drawing up detailed plans even before the project was officially announced 1 291 The committee hired Furness to advise them and later chose him to be the library s architect 1 290 91 Furness s earliest known drawing c 1887 shows a plan and a massing of volumes close to the library as built a stair tower separating vertical circulation from the reading room and stacks a building featuring an apsidal north end with an arc of seminar rooms clustered around the base of the apse like side chapels of a basilica 27 When the university changed the library s proposed site from 36th amp Spruce Streets to 34th amp Locust Streets Furness essentially redrew the plan as a mirror image 1 290 Furness used a similar plan and massing for his own country house Idlewild with a U shaped wrap around porch taking the place of the arc of seminar rooms As noted by architectural historian James F O Gorman For his own house in Media Furness shrank the plan of the contemporary University Library and erected over it a stone brick and shingle house 28 Furness used a similar plan and massing for the eastern half of Edward Brooke II s house although the addition of a conical roof turned its apse into a tower 29 nbsp Preliminary plan for the University of Pennsylvania Library c 1887 nbsp University of Pennsylvania Library 1888 90 nbsp Idlewild c 1888 Media Pennsylvania nbsp Brooke Mansion 1887 88 east facade Exterior edit Standing on a commanding site that overlooks the entire Schuylkill Valley and the Brooke Iron mills below this is the most spectacular of the 1880s houses Here sculptural mass rugged materials and a mountain site found an appropriate expression George E Thomas Frank Furness The Complete Works 1 284 Furness designed the front north facade of Brooke s house with two projecting bays an eastern semicircular apse tower with a J shaped wrap around porch and a western two and a half story gabled bay The exterior s whole first story was faced in brownstone block and its upper stories were clad in wood shingles i The porch s roof was carried on pyramidical brownstone block piers with eared corbels 2 58 The formal entrance was between the projecting bays from the porch through a pair of doors with intricately patterned inset leaded glass windows sidelights and a semi oval fanlight 2 64 65 The carriage entrance was on the porch s east side and featured a porte cochere and steps leading to a side door with an inset beveled glass window guarded by an intricate wrought iron grille 30 Toward the south end twin sets of French doors opened onto the porch The house s eastern half featured a shingled Mansard roof with shed roofed dormers on three sides two of them enclosing four windows each 3 227 The tower featured twin paired windows on the second and third stories the upper ones enclosed by conical roofed dormers 2 58 The tower s conical roof and the conical roofed dormers were crowned by copper finials now weathered to verdigris 2 58 Between the projecting bays the second story was clad in brownstone block with a large lunette window over the front doors 2 58 The house s original western now center projecting bay featured large twin windows on the first story and paired windows on the second and third stories Its shingled front and sides curved outward in a skirt and were carried on paired brownstone corbels 2 58 As a decorative element the shingles under its gable were cut to form concentric arcs The house featured Furness s characteristic upside down brick chimneys that flared outward near the top 31 Through massing architectural elements and variated windows Furness expressed the house s interior spaces on its exterior 1 284 nbsp Tower and porch note the upside down chimneys nbsp Porte cochere during May 20 2018 open house nbsp Wrought iron grille carriage entrance door nbsp Porch railing nbsp Formal entrance from porch nbsp Tower and terrace from lawn nbsp Note the concentric arcs of the gable s shingles nbsp 1893 addition and terrace nbsp 1893 addition from north nbsp South rear facade Interior edit nbsp Hall chimneypiece The house s plan was logical and efficient with all of the first floor formal rooms opening onto a large L shaped hall 32 A round library the base of the apse was tucked into the angle of the L 33 It featured two large sash windows with curved windowseats a recessed chimneypiece carved with flowers and two curving built in bookcases 2 61 Opposite the library entrance was the hall s canted floor to ceiling sandstone and oak chimneypiece To the south was a long billiard room with a carved oak chimneypiece and twin French doors opening onto the porch To the west in the front was the parlor with a gray granite arched fireplace and Colonial Revival butternut overmantel 34 To the west in the rear was the baronial dining room with an iron shingle roofed Modern Gothic mantel 35 reportedly cast at the family s foundry 2 63 The hall billiard room and dining room were paneled in coffered oak wainscoting 2 62 and their ceilings were circumscribed by oak beams each in a different pattern 3 228 232 33 The beams of the round library s ceiling formed a compass rose 3 229 The grand stairway climbed along the hall s south wall turned left to form a gallery over the carriage entrance and turned again along the north wall before reaching the second floor The hall was lighted by a row of four tall windows above the gallery that also lighted the upper hall 36 The second floor followed a similar plan as the first with four large bedrooms opening onto an extended upper hall 2 64 A dressing room between each pair of bedrooms allowed for discrete access by servants The third floor featured a central lobby illuminated by a large frosted glass skylight and surrounded by seven rooms These included a round nursery in the tower a long southeast bedroom with dressing room servant rooms and storage 2 64 One of the house s ingenious features was the windowless back staircase that climbed from the basement kitchen to the third floor 3 225 Light from the skylight in the roof was able to reach the basement level The back staircase permit ted servants access to various sections of the house without having to pass through formal rooms 3 225 Mrs Brooke loved flowers and the house was decorated with examples in wood stone glass and iron The leaded glass panels of the front doors sidelights and fanlight were crowded with stylized plant forms 37 The screen between the vestibule and hall featured seven wrought iron window grilles in the form of abstracted sunflowers 38 The hall chimneypiece featured an arched panel of carved sandstone flowers above the firebox oak corbels carved with oversized dahlias supporting the mantel shelf and an oak frieze of abstracted flowers crowning the whole 39 The newel post was carved with a plump oak floral garland which was echoed in miniature elsewhere in the hall 40 The billiard room chimneypiece featured a frieze of hibiscus carved in sandstone flanked by oversized garlands carved in oak 41 Carved vines intertwined though the rough cut granite of the parlor fireplace and flowers and garlands accented the butternut overmantel above it The Japanese inspired decoration of the library chimneypiece featured sunflower corbels supporting the mantel shelf a vividly carved frieze of camellias below the mirror and wispy clusters of vines dangling from above 42 The parlor s windowseat featured twin leaded glass windows each embellished with a stained glass floral garland and Mrs Brooke s first initial A nbsp Leaded glass panels front doors nbsp Sunflower screen between the vestibule and hall nbsp Hall and stair nbsp Hall newelpost nbsp Parlor chimneypiece nbsp Parlor window marked with an A nbsp Dining Room iron chimneypiece nbsp Library bookcase nbsp Upper Hall windows nbsp Back stairs1893 addition editEdward Brooke II expanded the house by about 40 to its current size in 1893 3 224 The contractor was Levi H Focht who had constructed the house five years earlier and had constructed Furness s additions to St Michael s Church nine years earlier 3 224 Acting as his own architect j Edward II added a third projecting bay to the front facade turning the original western bay into a center bay and connecting all three bays with a wide terrace The addition brought the kitchen out of the basement and added a second set of back stairs and a rope pulled elevator operated using counterweights like a dumbwaiter 3 224 T he western section was constructed for food preparation general storage servant s quarters and the like 3 224 The expansion had minor effects on the first floor formal rooms the parlor s box window became a short hallway to the new addition the old butler s pantry became a study off the billiard room and two of the dining room s doorways and perhaps the double window were moved It had a larger effect on the second floor three of the four bedrooms were cut down in size two to install bathrooms and the third for a hallway to the new addition 3 224 On the exterior the alterations required the moving of existing windows and the installation of new windows for the bathrooms Through the expansion Edward II s large house became a mansion of nearly 14 000 square feet 43 The 1890 census listed five live in servants in the household but the number increased following the 1893 expansion 2 63 The mansion was illuminated by gaslight until the installation of electricity in 1896 3 224 Telephone service arrived in 1904 3 224 Carriage house edit Edward II s passion was horses both racehorses and carriage horses 44 He kept a stable of twelve and exercised them on a racetrack at the top of the hill 44 He was a founding member of the Philadelphia Four in Hand Club organized by Fairman Rogers in 1890 45 and competed in the annual 3 day carriage marathon from New York City to Philadelphia k In 1898 Edward II designed and built an enormous 2 story carriage house with elevator southwest of the mansion 47 His collection grew to twenty four carriages and included buggies surreys broughams a pony cart and an Irish jaunting cart in which a person had to sit sideways 44 After a particular vehicle had been used it was brought into the carriage house thoroughly cleaned and then taken to the second floor on a hand operated lift to be readied for the next ride 44 Most of the carriages were sold to the National Park Service in 1941 l The carriage house burned in the 1970s The short hallway between the mansion s hall and dining room featured a special closet for Edward II s top hat whip and tack 3 225 Coaching paintings and prints and equestrian bronzes decorated many of the rooms 3 228 232 34 236 37 20th century edit nbsp Detail of 1890 panoramic view of Birdsboro Brookewood George Brooke s mansion and stables are left Edward Brooke II s mansion prior to its 1893 expansion is right George Brooke s mansion Brookewood and his son Edward II s mansion Brookeholm stood side by side on the hill sharing a 34 acre estate 3 225 George Brooke died at 93 on January 15 1912 two years after his wife He bequeathed his half share in all the Birdsboro companies to his two sons and Brookewood to George Jr 20 Following George Jr s 1914 marriage to Titanic survivor Lucile Carter the newlyweds and Carter s two children from her previous marriage split their time between his family s Philadelphia city house her house in Bryn Mawr and Brookewood 3 225 George and Lucile Brooke had one child together the flamboyant Elizabeth Muhlenberg Brooke m The family was in Birdsboro for Christmas 1917 when Brookewood burned the result of Christmas tree candles igniting nearby curtains 3 225 Firemen were unable to save the house because it was so cold that the source of water supply was frozen 44 The couple bought Clingan just west of Birdsboro that had been the home of sister in law Anne Louise Clingan Brooke s family 50 Lucile Carter Brooke died of a heart attack October 26 1934 51 George Jr survived her by 19 years living in a suite at Philadelphia s Barclay Hotel on Rittenhouse Square or at Clingan 52 nbsp Catharine Schaeffer Muhlenberg c 1790 by Joseph Wright on loan to The Speaker s House Trappe Pennsylvania nbsp Frederick Augustus Conrad Muhlenberg 1790 by Joseph Wright National Portrait Gallery Washington D C Following his parents deaths Edward II inherited Joseph Wright s 1790 Portrait of Frederick Muhlenberg the first Speaker of the U S House of Representatives and a great great grandfather on his mother s side 53 Edward II made the portrait the centerpiece of his mansion s parlor 3 230 George Jr inherited the pendant portrait of the Speaker s wife Catharine Schaeffer Muhlenberg n The Frederick Muhlenberg portrait is now in the collection of the National Portrait Gallery o Anne Louise Clingan Brooke died of pneumonia September 5 1935 57 A month earlier she had sold 3 780 acres of land 5 9 square miles inherited from her maternal grandfather Clement Brooke to the federal government This became Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site and part of Hopewell Big Woods 57 In her will she bequeathed Brookeholm to her husband it had been his wedding present to her 48 years earlier 3 225 Her obituary listed sons George III and Charles living at home and Edward Jr now married living in a house on the estate 57 Edward Brooke II survived his wife by five years dying at 77 on November 20 1940 20 He slipped and fell into a half filled bathtub of scalding water and died of burns at Reading Hospital 20 His viewing was held at the mansion Last evening hundreds of friends and former associates in various organizations filed through the drawing room of the Brooke residence to pay their last respects 58 His obituary listed sons George III Edward Jr now divorced 59 and Charles living at home 20 George III served as executor for his father s estate which took several years to settle 3 224 In 1942 at age 54 George III married widow Virginia Muhlenberg an artist and interior designer and a distant cousin 24 She and her two daughters moved into the mansion with him and his two brothers and seven servants 3 224 p George and Virginia Muhlenberg Brooke settled in Wyomissing a wealthy suburb of Reading several miles upriver from Birdsboro 44 He served as a delegate to the 1944 Republican National Convention 61 and remained active in Berks County politics until his death in 1967 24 His brothers retired to Daytona Beach Florida 25 The mansion and its contents were sold at auction in 1944 62 The property was purchased by a group of four partners including E Raymond Mohr a local funeral director and rented out for special events 63 Nursing home edit Registered nurse Elizabeth J Spanier purchased the mansion in 1948 and converted it into the Spanier Convalescent Home 64 Aided by her sister in law also an RN Spanier operated the facility for thirty years 64 Conversion into a nursing home did not affect the first floor formal rooms but interior alterations were made to the second and third floors Spanier put the mansion on the market in 1978 for 500 000 44 nbsp nbsp Brooke Mansion amidst the Mansion Heights housing development 2020 The mansion was purchased by a group of five partners who planned a housing development for the property They subdivided the 34 acre former estate leaving the mansion on a 3 acre lot and obtained a variance rezoning the mansion as a commercial property 65 The former Brooke Mansion in Birdsboro believed to be one of the largest residences ever constructed in Berks County will become the center of the Mansion Heights development being marketed by Park Road Realtors The owner developers of the project are Pat Kraras Mauro Cammarano Gus Kraras Chris Kraras and Daniel Casciano IV The former Brooke Mansion will be offered for sale to be restored for either commercial or professional purposes The mansion contains 33 rooms 19 bedrooms eight baths and 10 fireplaces The community plan for the development calls for 84 wooded quarter acre residential lots surrounding the mansion The estate is the last prime residential ground available for development in Birdsboro developers said 66 Bed amp breakfast edit The mansion remained unoccupied for more than a decade as the housing development was built around it 67 Carmelo Leggio owner of a pair of local pizza restaurants purchased it in 1989 for 450 000 68 He made significant repairs to the interior and exterior and added a new roof 3 225 He planned to open a gourmet restaurant on the mansion s first floor decorated with his collection of Victorian antiques and to operate a bed and breakfast using the bedrooms of the upper floors 68 The gourmet restaurant plans fell apart when his efforts to obtain a liquor license were blocked by strong neighborhood opposition 68 Leggio went ahead with the bed and breakfast which opened in Spring 1992 69 In May and June 1993 a local Tae Kwon Do instructor Dan Glutz rented a portion of the 4th made and was arrested for having sex with an under aged teenage girl 70 The ensuing legal trouble and negative publicity caused Leggio to abandon his plans for the mansion coupled with the a failed investment where he was scammed out of thousands of dollars 3 225 Vacant it suffered vandalism and fell into foreclosure 71 Peter and Marci Xenias bought the mansion in 1994 for 325 000 43 They reopened it as a bed and breakfast which they operated for close to a decade 72 The property was for sale in May 2018 for 1 640 000 43 Open house and auction edit nbsp Line for the May 20 2018 open house On May 20 2018 the Xenias family lent their mansion for a one day open house 73 The Women s Club of Birdsboro conducted guided tours as a fund raiser for local community organizations and scholarships 73 Some 857 people waited in line and paid 10 each to tour the mansion 73 Horst Auctioneers conducted an on site sale of the property on September 29 2018 74 A couple from Toronto Canada Vineet and Twisha Talpade purchased it for 572 000 and announced that they intend to restore the mansion to its former glory 4 Notes edit With 14 enslaved Africans Marcus Bird was also the largest slaveholder in Berks County in 1780 6 Brooke amp Buckley was a partnership among brothers Matthew Brooke Jr and Thomas Brooke and brother in law Daniel Buckley 8 The company used indentured and free labor both black and white and paid the blacks the same wage as the whites The large turnover in black workers may indicate that some were fugitive slaves earning money for their journey north to freedom in Canada 9 On April 1 1837 George and his brother Edward succeeded their father in business the output of which at that time amounted to only 200 tons annually In 1840 they added a charcoal furnace in order to use their wood in the manufacture of pig iron instead of operating the forges In 1848 and 1849 a rolling mill and nail factory were added In 1852 Anthracite Furnace No 1 was built and in 1870 and 1873 two more furnaces were added and capacity of the plant increased from time to time until the annual output exceeded 100 000 tons of pig iron 250 000 kegs of nails besides much bar and skelp iron In connection with their furnaces the brothers acquired a one half interest in the Warwick and Jones mines whence the greater part of their ore is taken the Wilmington amp Northern railroad connecting the furnaces and mines page 999 13 Elizabeth Mary Brooke became the first wife of U S Congressman Hiester Clymer pages 998 99 13 Both of their children died young 15 The three Brooke siblings paid for construction of St Michael s Episcopal Church 1851 53 Prior to that services had been held in local school buildings page 26 17 Edward Brooke was 52 when he married 18 year old Annie Moore Clymer in 1868 At his death in 1878 they had four young children ages 2 to 8 15 Annie Moore Clymer Brooke outlived him by nearly 50 years In 1890 she married Rev Randolph McKim rector of the Church of the Epiphany in Washington D C 19 Anne Louise Clingan had been born at nearby Hopewell Furnace which she later inherited She was the granddaughter of Clement Brooke the uncle who had been guardian to George Brooke and his siblings in the 1820s and 30s 21 It seems reasonable to presume that George Brooke paid for construction of the house His son Edward II was barely a year out of college Foster writes Edward Brooke II married in 1887 and his family commissioned Frank Furness to design a grand house emphasis added page 60 2 Foster writes T he upper floors are shingled in mahogany for durability and nearly all the originals are intact and in place page 60 2 Edward Brooke II has well developed and practical ideas of architectural beauty and proportion as exemplified in the new addition to his house at Birdsboro which he planned and supervised personally working out the details with an economy of space and exhibition of practical skill that would do credit to the experienced builder 13 Held on a spring weekend the New York City to Philadelphia marathon was a 3 day 200 mile point to point race with stops every 8 to 10 miles The coaches and teams left Manhattan early on a Saturday morning and arrived in Philadelphia 11 to 12 hours later After resting the horses and drivers on Sunday they repeated the timed 100 mile return trip on Monday 46 Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site purchased nineteen of Edward Brooke II s antique carriages in 1941 They were displayed in the site s Barn into the 1950s Most of them were transferred in 1964 to the Staten Island Historical Society s carriage museum 48 Betty Brooke Blake was married 5 times twice widowed and 3 times divorced She settled in Dallas Texas in 1943 where she opened a modern art gallery in 1951 and lived the rest of her life 49 Scholars long presumed that the Catharine Schaeffer Muhlenberg portrait had been lost in the 1917 burning of Brookewood 54 But the portrait was rediscovered in 2017 in the attic of Elizabeth Muhlenberg Brooke Blake s house in Newport Rhode Island following her 2016 death at age 100 54 Mrs Blake had been a benefactor of the Frederick Muhlenberg House in Trappe Pennsylvania and her sons placed the portrait on long term loan to the house museum 54 Virginia Muhlenberg Brooke widow of George Brooke III also was a descendant of Frederick Muhlenberg 54 She lent the Speaker s portrait to the National Portrait Gallery for its 1968 inaugural exhibition in the Old Patent Office Building 55 and sold it to the Smithsonian in 1974 56 Virginia Muhlenberg Brooke s elder daughter Nancy was married at the mansion in 1944 60 References edit a b c d e f g h George E Thomas et al Frank Furness The Complete Works New York Princeton Architectural Press revised 1996 pp 284 86 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Janet W Foster Edward Brooke House Birdsboro Pennsylvania The Queen Anne House America s Victorian Vernacular New York Abrams 2006 pp 56 65 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab George M Meiser and Gloria Jean Meiser The Birdsboro Mansion of Edward and Anne Brooke The Passing Scene Volume 13 Reading PA Historical Society of Berks County 2005 pp 224 39 a b Tony Phyrillas Brooke Mansion sold for 572 000 The Mercury September 30 2018 a b c d e f g Birdsboro Steel Foundry and Machine Company employee records from University of Pennsylvania Archives African Americans at Hopewell Furnace from National Park Service Hopewell Furnace in the American Revolution from National Park Service Joseph E Walker Negro Labor in the Charcoal Iron Industry of Southeastern Pennsylvania The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography vol 92 no 4 October 1969 Historical Society of Pennsylvania p 476 n 49 Reading 3 the Hopewell Village Community from National Park Service George Norbury Mackenzie Colonial Families of the United States of America Volume 6 Baltimore The Seaforth Press 1917 p 102 Charles Farmar Billopp A History of Thomas and Anne Farmar and Some of their Descendants in America New York The Grafton Press 1907 p 84 a b c d G Clymer Brooke Birdsboro Company with a Past Built to Last New York Newcomen Society in North America 1959 a b c d e f John Woolf Jordan Encyclopedia of Pennsylvania Biography Volume 3 Lewis Historical Publishing Company 1914 pp 1001 03 Morton L Montgomery History of Berks County in Pennsylvania Philadelphia Everts Peck amp Richards 1886 p 895 a b Henry Melchior Muhlenberg Richards Genealogy of the Hiester Family Pennsylvania German Genealogies Proceedings and Addresses Volume 16 Lancaster PA The Pennsylvania German Society 1907 pp 40 41 Brooke Manor House from HABS a b c d e Daniel K Miller The History of St Michael s Protestant Episcopal Church Birdsboro Pennsylvania St Michael s Episcopal Church 1951 Edward Brooke Memorial Window from Alarmy Annie Moore Clymer McKim from Church of the Epiphany a b c d e f Edward Brooke Sr Dies From Burns The Reading Eagle November 21 1940 p 1 Death claims Mrs Brooke in Phila hospital The Reading Times September 7 1935 p 2 Brooke Clingan Largely Attended Wedding Near Birdsboro The Reading Eagle October 12 1887 p 1 With the First City Troop on the Mexican Border from New York Public Library a b c Virginia Brooke artist designer The Reading Eagle November 2 1999 p B 6 a b Edward Brooke Jr The Daytona Beach Morning Journal April 20 1976 p 3A Charles C Brooke The Daytona Beach Morning Journal December 10 1975 p 9B George E Thomas Frank Furness Architecture in the Age of the Great Machines Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press 2018 ISBN 0812249526 James F O Gorman The Architecture of Frank Furness Philadelphia Museum of Art 1973 p 64 East facade from brookemansion com Porch and side door from oldhouses com Ellen Zeiper Frank Furness An Eclectic Architect s Chimney Designs American Art amp Antiques vol 1 no 3 November December 1978 pp 62 69 Floor plans Archived 2018 02 15 at the Wayback Machine from phillycurbed com Library from brookemansion com Parlor from brookemansion com Dining room from brookemansion com Stairway from alllehighvalleyhomes com Front doors from brookemansion com Vestibule from oldhouses com Chimneypiece from alllehighvalleyhomes Newel post from alllehighvalleyHomes com Billiard room fireplace amp overmantel from lisatigerhomes com Library chimneypiece from lisatigerhomes com a b c 301 Washington St Birdsboro PA from Zillow a b c d e f g Matt Romanski Brooke Mansion Is a Monument to Bygone Era The Reading Eagle December 24 1978 pp 12 13 Fairman Rogers Manual of Coaching Philadelphia J B Lippincott Company 1900 p 511 1 Elizabeth Toomey Seabrook Coaching in America The Carriage Journal vol 2 no 4 Spring 1965 pp 116 18 Elegant Stable to be erected by Edward Brooke The Reading Eagle October 8 1898 p 2 Leah Glaser Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site Administrative History Northeast Region History Program National Park Service August 2005 pp 244 46 PDF Rob Brinkley The woman who brought contemporary art and Picasso to Dallas The Dallas Morning News March 28 2012 Historical society hopes to stall plan to demolish mansion The Reading Eagle June 13 2005 Obituary Mrs George Brooke The New York Times October 27 1934 George Brooke Retired Iron Merchant The Philadelphia Evening Bulletin August 14 1953 Henrietta Meier Oakley and J C Schwab The Muhlenberg Album New Haven CT Tuttle Press 1910 2 a b c d Lisa Minardi Rediscovering the Muhlenberg Family Antiques amp Fine Art vol 17 no 2 Summer 2018 pp 110 15 J Benjamin Townsend This New Man A Discourse on Portraits Smithsonian Institution Press 1968 pp 64 65 Frederick Augustus Conrad Muhlenberg from National Portrait Gallery a b c Mrs Edward Brooke Dies at Age of 71 The Reading Eagle September 6 1935 p 1 Edward Brooke Funeral Held in Birdsboro The Reading Eagle November 23 1940 p 1 Mrs Helen F Brooke Files Suit for Divorce The Reading Eagle August 6 1939 p 2 Obituary Virginia Steininger Lawson The Reading Eagle June 14 2019 George Brooke III from politicalgraveyard com The Reading Eagle January 28 1992 p A 1 Outing Held by Officials The Reading Eagle August 16 1947 p B 6 a b Elizabeth J Spanier Former Administrator The Reading Eagle November 17 1992 p C 3 Birdsboro Conversion Opposed The Reading Eagle November 13 1990 p 24 Brooke Mansion set to be developed The Reading Eagle June 2 1985 p C 17 Stephanie Caltagirone Brooke Mansion sets open house The Reading Eagle April 3 1992 p W 3 a b c Peter L DeCoursey Plans for mansion draw flak The Reading Times November 16 1990 pp 25 26 Peter L DeCoursey Brooke Mansion sets open house The Reading Times April 3 1992 Glutz was Sentence in Sex Case The Morning Call July 1 1995 Restored Brooke Mansion bridges centuries AAA World Magazine September October 1996 pp 16 17 American Automobile Association Brooke Mansion website a b c Jeremy Long People line up to see inside of Brooke Mansion in Birdsboro The Reading Eagle May 21 2018 3 Historic Brooke Mansion from Horst Auctioneers nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Brooke Mansion Birdsboro Pennsylvania Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Brooke Mansion Birdsboro Pennsylvania amp oldid 1193345279, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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