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Mount Airy Plantation

Mount Airy, near Warsaw in Richmond County, Virginia, is the first neo-Palladian villa mid-Georgian plantation house built in the United States. It was constructed in 1764 for Colonel John Tayloe II, perhaps the richest Virginia planter of his generation, upon the burning of his family's older house. John Ariss is the attributed architect and builder. Tayloe's daughter, Rebecca and her husband Francis Lightfoot Lee, one of the only pair of brothers to sign the Declaration of Independence (Richard Henry Lee being the other brother) are buried on the estate, as are many other Tayloes. Before the American Civil War, Mount Airy was a prominent racing horse stud farm, as well as the headquarters of about 10-12 separate but interdependent slave plantations along the Rappahannock River (comprising some 60,000 acres). Mount Airy is listed on the National Register of Historic Places as a National Historic Landmark as well as on the Virginia Landmarks Register and is still privately owned by Tayloe's descendants.

Mount Airy
Mount Airy in 1971
LocationWest of Warsaw on U.S. 360, Richmond County, Virginia
Coordinates37°58′20″N 76°47′29″W / 37.97222°N 76.79139°W / 37.97222; -76.79139
Area450 acres (180 ha)
Built1758–62
ArchitectJohn Ariss
Architectural styleNeo-Palladian
NRHP reference No.66000845[1]
VLR No.079-0013
Significant dates
Added to NRHPOctober 15, 1966[1]
Designated NHLOctober 9, 1960[3]
Designated VLRSeptember 9, 1969[2]

Architecture edit

 
River Facade of Mount Airy, Richmond Co, Virginia

Mount Airy is composed of a massive two-story central block above a high basement, 69 feet (21 m) long and 47 feet (14 m) deep, two curving one-story passageways, and two 36-foot (11 m)-square two-story end dependencies set forward.[4] The five-part unit, 128 feet (39 m) long, encloses three sides of a semi-circular forecourt.[4] This court is raised by a low terrace above the entrance drive and is reached by cut and molded stone steps, flanked by elaborate carved stone vases on pedestals.[4] Set on a ridge, the house commands a wide view of the Rappahannock River Valley.[4] The 3-foot-thick (0.91 m) walls of the central unit are made of dark-brown sandstone, carefully hewn and laid in courses of random height, with architectural trim in light-colored limestone.[4] It is possible that the exterior may originally have been stuccoed though no trace remains.[4] The north or entrance façade is approached from the forecourt by a flight of steps leading to a recessed loggia, whose square columns, faced with four Roman Doric pilasters, define three rectilinear openings.[4] The projecting central pavilion is of rusticated limestone, with three windows in the second story and a crowning pediment.[4] The south or garden facade is almost identical in composition except that the three entrances in the pavilion are spanned by round arches with heavily marked voussoirs and keystones, and the upper windows are unframed.[4] The other windows are framed by stone architraves and sills, and the limestone belt course and rusticated angle quoins are very prominent.[4] The existing broad hip roof, pierced by four interior chimneys located near the ridge, is a replacement of the original roof, possibly a hip-on-hip that was destroyed by fire in 1844.[4] It "is the most architecturally sophisticated of Virginia's surviving colonial mansions."[5]

 
Mount Airy Buildings and Gardens

The south or rear elevation was undoubtedly taken directly from Plate LVIII of James Gibbs' Book of Architecture and the north elevation was less directly derived from a plate of Haddo House in Scotland, shown in William Adam's Vitruvius Scoticus.[4] The two stone two-story dependencies have hipped roofs and central chimneys and their corners are given the same quoin treatment as the main house.[4] The connecting passageways, also of stone, are quadrants covered with shed roofs that are concealed from the north or front.[4] At the junction with the central block, the roofs of the connections are stepped up to allow entrances to the main floor of the house.[4]

Gardens edit

The shaped terraced levels of its gardens are still clearly visible beneath its modern covering of lawn. Mount Airy has the earliest surviving Orangery in North America. A sustainable, owner-operated, flower farm in Virginia's Northern Neck and part of historic Mount Airy Farm occupies the space today. The gardens produce a variety of blooms, herbs, woody ornamentals, & cold season vegetables, for weddings, events, flower bouquets, and floral design.[6]

History edit

Fauntleroy edit

Prior to the purchase by Col. William Tayloe, John Tayloe II's grandfather, the land on which Mount Airy stands was originally purchased by Colonel Moore Fauntleroy in 1651, to add to his existing plantation on the north shore of the Rappahannock River in old Rappahannock County.[7]

The Old House edit

 
Jefferson Fry Map 1751

In 1682 Col. William Tayloe purchased 3,000 acres from Col. Moore Fauntleroy's son William, and built a 20-room brick dwelling called "The Old House."[7] William's son, Col. John Tayloe I inherited the house upon his father's death in 1710.

John Tayloe II edit

 
John Tayloe II painting by John Wollaston

The Tayloe family had owned the land around Mount Airy for over a century before Colonel John Tayloe II, a fourth-generation tobacco planter, began building a manor house with a commanding view of the Rappahannock River valley as well as westward towards the town of Tappahannock on a ridge above the broad bottomlands and marshes of the Rappahannock River. The project began around 1748 and finished in 1758. Tayloe used reference books of the day to incorporate then-modern and now-classical architectural themes. As discussed below, John Tayloe II also became a distinguished breeder of racehorses at this plantation. The original stable and a few outbuildings (including a smokehouse and dairy/ice-house) survive to this day.

Col. Tayloe's son-in-law Francis Lightfoot Lee, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, lived nearby, at Menokin a gift from JTII to his son-in-law and daughter on the occasion of their marriage.[8] Tayloe's daughter and her famous husband are buried in the Tayloe family cemetery, approximately 300 yards (270 m) from the manor house.[8]

John Tayloe II, who established the family's turf-racing business, imported Jenny Cameron, Jolly Roger and Childers to Virginia, three of the most important colonial racing imports. He also owned the winning racehorses Hero, Juniper, Single Peeper, Yorick, Traveller and Nonpareil.[9][10] The first noteworthy colonial horse race was won by Col. Tasker's 6 year old imported mare Selima at Annapolis, Maryland in May 1752. That December, Selima raced in Gloucester, Virginia and beat Col William Byrd's "Trial", as well as this Col. Tayloe's "Jenny Cameron" & "Childers" and Col. Thornton's "Unnamed". That sweepstakes, in four mile heats and with a purse of 500 pistoles, marks the beginning of the competition between Maryland and Virginia in horseracing. In April, 1766, Col. Tayloe's "Traveller" won with ease, beating Col Lewis Burwell III of Kingsmill Plantation's "John Dismal" and Francis Whiting's "Janus." In October Col. Tayloe's "Hero" won the purse, beating Col William Byrd's "Trial" & "Valiant," and Richard Henry Lee's "Mark Anthony." In November, at Chestertown, Maryland, a purse of 100 pistoles was run for by the two most celebrated horses of the era, Col. Tayloe's "Yorick" and Sam Galloway's (of Tulip Hill in Maryland) horse "Selim" (son of Selima). In May, 1767, Col. Tayloe won the "50 Pistoles Purse" near Annapolis as his horse "Traveller" outraced: "Trial" Bullen's, Benedict Calvert's "Regulus" and Dr. Hamilton's "Ranger". In the spring of 1769, Capt Littleberry Hardyman again won the purse with "Mark Anthony," beating John Tayloe's "Nonpareil" and Nathaniel Withoe's "Fanny Murray." In the fall of 1774, at Fredericksburg John Tayloe's "Single Peeper" won the "50 Pound Purse" beating Benjamin Grymes' "Miss Spot," Walker Taliaferro's "Valiant," Spotswood's "Fearnaught," Charles Jones' "Regulus," Procter's "Jenny Bottom," Robert Slaughter's "Ariel" and Peter Presley' Thornton's "Ariel."[10]

 
Painting by Gilbert Stuart on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art

John Tayloe III edit

The son of John Tayloe II also continued his father's horse racing legacy at Mount Airy importing Diomed who sired Sir Archie, arguably the most important thoroughbred racehorse of his era.[11] Upon completion of his townhouse, The Octagon he cofounded founded the Washington Jockey Club in the new federal city, Washington, D.C. (which became his winter residence). He also operated an ironworks and shipbuilding facility near Neabsco, Virginia, Neabsco Iron Works, led a company of dragoons into Pennsylvania to suppress the Whiskey Rebellion, and held various local political offices.

William Henry Tayloe edit

The son of John Tayloe III, took over Mount Airy in 1828. Its enslaved population continued to increase, even as depleted soil led to crop shortfalls and declining profits. He and his brothers responded in part by acquiring cotton fields in west-central or Black Belt region of Alabama. Between 1833 and 1862, William Henry Tayloe moved a total of 218 slaves (many teenagers) about 800 miles from Virginia to Alabama. Because the trans-Atlantic slave trade nominally closed because Britain ended slavery and because the U.S. Constitution's provisions against slave imports took effect in 1808, Virginia became a net exporter of enslaved people within the U.S. Although the U.S. had fewer than a million enslaved people as the 19th century began (mostly concentrated in the coastal and piedmont South), with the invention of the cotton gin and development of internal slave trading, there were four times as many enslaved people four decades later, working from Charleston to Texas.

A fire started by a maid in 1844 gutted the house and destroyed most of the woodwork of master carpenter William Buckland. It was rebuilt within its shell of brown sandstone with limestone quoins and using the original floor plan.[4]

Henry Augustine "Harry" Tayloe II edit

Henry Gwynne Tayloe edit

Henry Gwynne Tayloe Jr. and Grand Polly edit

Current use edit

Mount Airy is a private home and is still in possession of the Tayloe family, currently, Mr. John Tayloe Emery, Sr., and his family, a media and entertainment professional, and is not generally open to the public. The Tayloe family papers are at the Virginia Historical Society.

Colonial Rehab edit

Mount Airy was featured in a HGTV show based on the restoration work done to the West Wing of the manor house. The show, called American Rehab Virginia (née Colonial Rehab), was written by Mr. Emery and produced by Magnetic Productions and began airing in 2015, reruns can be found on HGTV and DIY Network.[12]

Mount Airy Bluegrass Festival edit

The inaugural Mount Airy Bluegrass Festival billed as "Bluegrass Under The Stars," was held in June 2017 and featured John Starling of The Seldom Scene, his son Jay Starling a member of the band Love Canon on dobro; with guitarist Jesse Harper (Love Canon), bassist Cameron Ralston (Spacebomb), cellist Nat Smith and Courtney Hartman (Della Mae) on vocals and guitar. Staged and produced by John Tayloe Emery Sr. and cousin Robert Tayloe Cook VII, it would turn out to be the Bluegrass Hall of Fame member John Starling's final show. [13][14] In its second year it was held on June 30, 2018, the lineup included The Seldom Scene, Ralph Stanley II and the Clinch Mountain Boys, The Trailblazers w/ Ivy Phillips and special guests The Waterview Bluegrass Assembly.[15][16] In 2019 it featured Rhonda Vincent and the Rage, Ralph Stanley II and the Clinch Mountain Boys, Junior Sisk and Ramblers Choice, Josh Grigsby and County Line, and Carolina Blue, on June 28 and 29.[17][18] Hubs Peanuts has been a sponsor since the inaugural "Bluegrass Under the Stars," while both Alewerks Brewing, Williamsburg, VA, and Champion Brewing Co., Richmond & Charlottesville, have provided beer for the event.[19][20]

Mount Airy Water Fowl edit

Mr. Emery has enhanced the property around the western boundary of the property on Catpoint Creek as a waterfowl destination, building new blinds and banking impoundments for flooding along the Atlantic Flyway. The estate holds duck, geese, turkey, and whitetail hunts.[21]

Mount Airy Gardens edit

The gracious Mrs. Catherine Emery has painstakingly reinvigorated the gardens around the Manor House, including converting a root cellar into a florist building. The operation is based on sustainability and produces a variety of blooms, herbs, woody ornamentals & cold season vegetables for weddings, events, flower bouquets, and floral design.[22]

Listing on National Register of Historic Places edit

Mount Airy was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on October 15, 1966. It was identified as a National Historic Landmark on October 9, 1960.

See also edit

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  2. ^ "Virginia Landmarks Register". Virginia Department of Historic Resources. Retrieved June 5, 2013.
  3. ^ . National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Archived from the original on October 6, 2012. Retrieved June 27, 2008.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p NRHP Inventory, Nomination Form, § 7, Description
  5. ^ "079-0013 Mount Airy".
  6. ^ "Gardens".
  7. ^ a b "Mount Airy - HouseHistree".
  8. ^ a b NRHP Inventory, Nomination Form, § 8, Significance
  9. ^ John Harding Peach, On the banks of the Rappahannock, (AuthorHouse), page146
  10. ^ a b Blooded Horses of the Colonial Days, Francis Barnum Culver, By the Author, 1922
  11. ^ "Sir Archy".
  12. ^ Ritchie, Kevin (July 8, 2014). "HGTV greenlights "Crowded House," "Colonial Rehab"". Realscreen. Retrieved May 23, 2015.
  13. ^ "Local bluegrass legend will get a fitting outdoor concert tribute at Mount Airy". May 23, 2017.
  14. ^ https://mountairy.farm/tickets
  15. ^ https://bluegrasstoday.com/events-directory/mount-airy-bluegrass-festival/
  16. ^ https://rivercountrynews.com/mount-airy-bluegrass-festival-in-the-final-stages-p3651-275.htm
  17. ^ https://bluegrasstoday.com/events-directory/mount-airy-bluegrass-festival-2/
  18. ^ https://www.jambase.com/festival/mount-airy-bluegrass-festival-2019
  19. ^ https://mountairy.ticketleap.com/bluegrass-festival/details
  20. ^ https://bluegrasstoday.com/events-directory/bluegrass-under-the-stars-with-john-starling/
  21. ^ "Hunting".
  22. ^ "Gardens".

Bibliography

  • National Park Service: Mount Airy October 8, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  • National Park Service, National Register of Historic Places Inventory, Nomination Form, Mount Airy (Francis Lightfoot Lee Grave), May 18, 1971
  • Dunn, Richard S. (1977). "A Tale of Two Plantations: Slave Life at Mesopotamia in Jamaica and Mount Airy in Virginia, 1799 to 1828". William and Mary Quarterly. 34 (1). Williamsburg, Virginia: 32–65. doi:10.2307/1922625. JSTOR 1922625. S2CID 147081402.
  • Morrison, Hugh (1952). Early American Architecture. New York.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Pierson, William H. Jr. (1970). American Buildings and Their Architects: The Colonial and Neo-Classical Styles. New York.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Waterman, Thomas T. (1952). The Mansions of Virginia. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.
  • Waterman, Thomas T. (1950). The Dwellings of Colonial Virginia. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.
  • Grandin, Greg (2015). "'A Tale of Two Plantations,' by Richard S. Dunn". New York Times Sunday Book Review. New York. Retrieved September 23, 2015.

External links edit

  • Mount Airy Plantation Official Site
  • Mount Airy, State Route 646 vicinity, Warsaw, Richmond, VA: 42 photos, 3 color transparencies, 7 data pages, and 5 photo caption pages at Historic American Buildings Survey
  • Mount Airy, Barn, State Route 646 vicinity, Warsaw, Richmond, VA: 1 photo at Historic American Buildings Survey
  • Mount Airy, Dairy, State Route 646 vicinity, Warsaw, Richmond, VA: 1 photo and 1 photo caption page at Historic American Buildings Survey
  • Mount Airy, Counting House, State Route 646 vicinity, Warsaw, Richmond, VA: 1 photo and 1 photo caption page at Historic American Buildings Survey
  • Mount Airy, Smokehouse, State Route 646 vicinity, Warsaw, Richmond, VA: 2 photos and 1 photo caption page at Historic American Buildings Survey
  • Mount Airy, Orangery (Ruins), State Route 646 vicinity, Warsaw, Richmond, VA: 2 photos and 1 photo caption page at Historic American Buildings Survey
  • More History about Mount Airy

mount, airy, plantation, mount, airy, near, warsaw, richmond, county, virginia, first, palladian, villa, georgian, plantation, house, built, united, states, constructed, 1764, colonel, john, tayloe, perhaps, richest, virginia, planter, generation, upon, burnin. Mount Airy near Warsaw in Richmond County Virginia is the first neo Palladian villa mid Georgian plantation house built in the United States It was constructed in 1764 for Colonel John Tayloe II perhaps the richest Virginia planter of his generation upon the burning of his family s older house John Ariss is the attributed architect and builder Tayloe s daughter Rebecca and her husband Francis Lightfoot Lee one of the only pair of brothers to sign the Declaration of Independence Richard Henry Lee being the other brother are buried on the estate as are many other Tayloes Before the American Civil War Mount Airy was a prominent racing horse stud farm as well as the headquarters of about 10 12 separate but interdependent slave plantations along the Rappahannock River comprising some 60 000 acres Mount Airy is listed on the National Register of Historic Places as a National Historic Landmark as well as on the Virginia Landmarks Register and is still privately owned by Tayloe s descendants Mount AiryU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S National Historic LandmarkVirginia Landmarks RegisterMount Airy in 1971LocationWest of Warsaw on U S 360 Richmond County VirginiaCoordinates37 58 20 N 76 47 29 W 37 97222 N 76 79139 W 37 97222 76 79139Area450 acres 180 ha Built1758 62ArchitectJohn ArissArchitectural styleNeo PalladianNRHP reference No 66000845 1 VLR No 079 0013Significant datesAdded to NRHPOctober 15 1966 1 Designated NHLOctober 9 1960 3 Designated VLRSeptember 9 1969 2 Contents 1 Architecture 2 Gardens 3 History 3 1 Fauntleroy 3 2 The Old House 3 3 John Tayloe II 3 4 John Tayloe III 3 5 William Henry Tayloe 3 6 Henry Augustine Harry Tayloe II 3 7 Henry Gwynne Tayloe 3 8 Henry Gwynne Tayloe Jr and Grand Polly 4 Current use 4 1 Colonial Rehab 4 2 Mount Airy Bluegrass Festival 4 3 Mount Airy Water Fowl 4 4 Mount Airy Gardens 5 Listing on National Register of Historic Places 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksArchitecture edit nbsp River Facade of Mount Airy Richmond Co VirginiaMount Airy is composed of a massive two story central block above a high basement 69 feet 21 m long and 47 feet 14 m deep two curving one story passageways and two 36 foot 11 m square two story end dependencies set forward 4 The five part unit 128 feet 39 m long encloses three sides of a semi circular forecourt 4 This court is raised by a low terrace above the entrance drive and is reached by cut and molded stone steps flanked by elaborate carved stone vases on pedestals 4 Set on a ridge the house commands a wide view of the Rappahannock River Valley 4 The 3 foot thick 0 91 m walls of the central unit are made of dark brown sandstone carefully hewn and laid in courses of random height with architectural trim in light colored limestone 4 It is possible that the exterior may originally have been stuccoed though no trace remains 4 The north or entrance facade is approached from the forecourt by a flight of steps leading to a recessed loggia whose square columns faced with four Roman Doric pilasters define three rectilinear openings 4 The projecting central pavilion is of rusticated limestone with three windows in the second story and a crowning pediment 4 The south or garden facade is almost identical in composition except that the three entrances in the pavilion are spanned by round arches with heavily marked voussoirs and keystones and the upper windows are unframed 4 The other windows are framed by stone architraves and sills and the limestone belt course and rusticated angle quoins are very prominent 4 The existing broad hip roof pierced by four interior chimneys located near the ridge is a replacement of the original roof possibly a hip on hip that was destroyed by fire in 1844 4 It is the most architecturally sophisticated of Virginia s surviving colonial mansions 5 nbsp Mount Airy Buildings and Gardens The south or rear elevation was undoubtedly taken directly from Plate LVIII of James Gibbs Book of Architecture and the north elevation was less directly derived from a plate of Haddo House in Scotland shown in William Adam s Vitruvius Scoticus 4 The two stone two story dependencies have hipped roofs and central chimneys and their corners are given the same quoin treatment as the main house 4 The connecting passageways also of stone are quadrants covered with shed roofs that are concealed from the north or front 4 At the junction with the central block the roofs of the connections are stepped up to allow entrances to the main floor of the house 4 Gardens editThe shaped terraced levels of its gardens are still clearly visible beneath its modern covering of lawn Mount Airy has the earliest surviving Orangery in North America A sustainable owner operated flower farm in Virginia s Northern Neck and part of historic Mount Airy Farm occupies the space today The gardens produce a variety of blooms herbs woody ornamentals amp cold season vegetables for weddings events flower bouquets and floral design 6 History editFauntleroy edit Prior to the purchase by Col William Tayloe John Tayloe II s grandfather the land on which Mount Airy stands was originally purchased by Colonel Moore Fauntleroy in 1651 to add to his existing plantation on the north shore of the Rappahannock River in old Rappahannock County 7 The Old House edit nbsp Jefferson Fry Map 1751 In 1682 Col William Tayloe purchased 3 000 acres from Col Moore Fauntleroy s son William and built a 20 room brick dwelling called The Old House 7 William s son Col John Tayloe I inherited the house upon his father s death in 1710 John Tayloe II edit nbsp John Tayloe II painting by John Wollaston The Tayloe family had owned the land around Mount Airy for over a century before Colonel John Tayloe II a fourth generation tobacco planter began building a manor house with a commanding view of the Rappahannock River valley as well as westward towards the town of Tappahannock on a ridge above the broad bottomlands and marshes of the Rappahannock River The project began around 1748 and finished in 1758 Tayloe used reference books of the day to incorporate then modern and now classical architectural themes As discussed below John Tayloe II also became a distinguished breeder of racehorses at this plantation The original stable and a few outbuildings including a smokehouse and dairy ice house survive to this day Col Tayloe s son in law Francis Lightfoot Lee a signer of the Declaration of Independence lived nearby at Menokin a gift from JTII to his son in law and daughter on the occasion of their marriage 8 Tayloe s daughter and her famous husband are buried in the Tayloe family cemetery approximately 300 yards 270 m from the manor house 8 John Tayloe II who established the family s turf racing business imported Jenny Cameron Jolly Roger and Childers to Virginia three of the most important colonial racing imports He also owned the winning racehorses Hero Juniper Single Peeper Yorick Traveller and Nonpareil 9 10 The first noteworthy colonial horse race was won by Col Tasker s 6 year old imported mare Selima at Annapolis Maryland in May 1752 That December Selima raced in Gloucester Virginia and beat Col William Byrd s Trial as well as this Col Tayloe s Jenny Cameron amp Childers and Col Thornton s Unnamed That sweepstakes in four mile heats and with a purse of 500 pistoles marks the beginning of the competition between Maryland and Virginia in horseracing In April 1766 Col Tayloe s Traveller won with ease beating Col Lewis Burwell III of Kingsmill Plantation s John Dismal and Francis Whiting s Janus In October Col Tayloe s Hero won the purse beating Col William Byrd s Trial amp Valiant and Richard Henry Lee s Mark Anthony In November at Chestertown Maryland a purse of 100 pistoles was run for by the two most celebrated horses of the era Col Tayloe s Yorick and Sam Galloway s of Tulip Hill in Maryland horse Selim son of Selima In May 1767 Col Tayloe won the 50 Pistoles Purse near Annapolis as his horse Traveller outraced Trial Bullen s Benedict Calvert s Regulus and Dr Hamilton s Ranger In the spring of 1769 Capt Littleberry Hardyman again won the purse with Mark Anthony beating John Tayloe s Nonpareil and Nathaniel Withoe s Fanny Murray In the fall of 1774 at Fredericksburg John Tayloe s Single Peeper won the 50 Pound Purse beating Benjamin Grymes Miss Spot Walker Taliaferro s Valiant Spotswood s Fearnaught Charles Jones Regulus Procter s Jenny Bottom Robert Slaughter s Ariel and Peter Presley Thornton s Ariel 10 nbsp Painting by Gilbert Stuart on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art John Tayloe III edit The son of John Tayloe II also continued his father s horse racing legacy at Mount Airy importing Diomed who sired Sir Archie arguably the most important thoroughbred racehorse of his era 11 Upon completion of his townhouse The Octagon he cofounded founded the Washington Jockey Club in the new federal city Washington D C which became his winter residence He also operated an ironworks and shipbuilding facility near Neabsco Virginia Neabsco Iron Works led a company of dragoons into Pennsylvania to suppress the Whiskey Rebellion and held various local political offices William Henry Tayloe edit The son of John Tayloe III took over Mount Airy in 1828 Its enslaved population continued to increase even as depleted soil led to crop shortfalls and declining profits He and his brothers responded in part by acquiring cotton fields in west central or Black Belt region of Alabama Between 1833 and 1862 William Henry Tayloe moved a total of 218 slaves many teenagers about 800 miles from Virginia to Alabama Because the trans Atlantic slave trade nominally closed because Britain ended slavery and because the U S Constitution s provisions against slave imports took effect in 1808 Virginia became a net exporter of enslaved people within the U S Although the U S had fewer than a million enslaved people as the 19th century began mostly concentrated in the coastal and piedmont South with the invention of the cotton gin and development of internal slave trading there were four times as many enslaved people four decades later working from Charleston to Texas A fire started by a maid in 1844 gutted the house and destroyed most of the woodwork of master carpenter William Buckland It was rebuilt within its shell of brown sandstone with limestone quoins and using the original floor plan 4 Henry Augustine Harry Tayloe II edit Henry Gwynne Tayloe edit Henry Gwynne Tayloe Jr and Grand Polly editCurrent use editMount Airy is a private home and is still in possession of the Tayloe family currently Mr John Tayloe Emery Sr and his family a media and entertainment professional and is not generally open to the public The Tayloe family papers are at the Virginia Historical Society Colonial Rehab edit Mount Airy was featured in a HGTV show based on the restoration work done to the West Wing of the manor house The show called American Rehab Virginia nee Colonial Rehab was written by Mr Emery and produced by Magnetic Productions and began airing in 2015 reruns can be found on HGTV and DIY Network 12 Mount Airy Bluegrass Festival edit The inaugural Mount Airy Bluegrass Festival billed as Bluegrass Under The Stars was held in June 2017 and featured John Starling of The Seldom Scene his son Jay Starling a member of the band Love Canon on dobro with guitarist Jesse Harper Love Canon bassist Cameron Ralston Spacebomb cellist Nat Smith and Courtney Hartman Della Mae on vocals and guitar Staged and produced by John Tayloe Emery Sr and cousin Robert Tayloe Cook VII it would turn out to be the Bluegrass Hall of Fame member John Starling s final show 13 14 In its second year it was held on June 30 2018 the lineup included The Seldom Scene Ralph Stanley II and the Clinch Mountain Boys The Trailblazers w Ivy Phillips and special guests The Waterview Bluegrass Assembly 15 16 In 2019 it featured Rhonda Vincent and the Rage Ralph Stanley II and the Clinch Mountain Boys Junior Sisk and Ramblers Choice Josh Grigsby and County Line and Carolina Blue on June 28 and 29 17 18 Hubs Peanuts has been a sponsor since the inaugural Bluegrass Under the Stars while both Alewerks Brewing Williamsburg VA and Champion Brewing Co Richmond amp Charlottesville have provided beer for the event 19 20 Mount Airy Water Fowl edit Mr Emery has enhanced the property around the western boundary of the property on Catpoint Creek as a waterfowl destination building new blinds and banking impoundments for flooding along the Atlantic Flyway The estate holds duck geese turkey and whitetail hunts 21 Mount Airy Gardens edit The gracious Mrs Catherine Emery has painstakingly reinvigorated the gardens around the Manor House including converting a root cellar into a florist building The operation is based on sustainability and produces a variety of blooms herbs woody ornamentals amp cold season vegetables for weddings events flower bouquets and floral design 22 Listing on National Register of Historic Places editMount Airy was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on October 15 1966 It was identified as a National Historic Landmark on October 9 1960 See also editIsaac Meason House the only other true cut Palladian in the U S in suburban Pittsburgh The Octagon House mansion built in 1800 by Col John Tayloe III in Washington D C Benjamin Ogle Tayloe House a mansion built on Lafayette Square in Washington List of National Historic Landmarks in Virginia National Register of Historic Places listings in Richmond County Virginia Tayloe House Williamsburg Virginia References editNotes a b National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service July 9 2010 Virginia Landmarks Register Virginia Department of Historic Resources Retrieved June 5 2013 Mount Airy National Historic Landmark summary listing National Park Service Archived from the original on October 6 2012 Retrieved June 27 2008 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p NRHP Inventory Nomination Form 7 Description 079 0013 Mount Airy Gardens a b Mount Airy HouseHistree a b NRHP Inventory Nomination Form 8 Significance John Harding Peach On the banks of the Rappahannock AuthorHouse page146 a b Blooded Horses of the Colonial Days Francis Barnum Culver By the Author 1922 Sir Archy Ritchie Kevin July 8 2014 HGTV greenlights Crowded House Colonial Rehab Realscreen Retrieved May 23 2015 Local bluegrass legend will get a fitting outdoor concert tribute at Mount Airy May 23 2017 https mountairy farm tickets https bluegrasstoday com events directory mount airy bluegrass festival https rivercountrynews com mount airy bluegrass festival in the final stages p3651 275 htm https bluegrasstoday com events directory mount airy bluegrass festival 2 https www jambase com festival mount airy bluegrass festival 2019 https mountairy ticketleap com bluegrass festival details https bluegrasstoday com events directory bluegrass under the stars with john starling Hunting Gardens Bibliography National Park Service Mount Airy Archived October 8 2006 at the Wayback Machine National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form Mount Airy Francis Lightfoot Lee Grave May 18 1971 Dunn Richard S 1977 A Tale of Two Plantations Slave Life at Mesopotamia in Jamaica and Mount Airy in Virginia 1799 to 1828 William and Mary Quarterly 34 1 Williamsburg Virginia 32 65 doi 10 2307 1922625 JSTOR 1922625 S2CID 147081402 Morrison Hugh 1952 Early American Architecture New York a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Pierson William H Jr 1970 American Buildings and Their Architects The Colonial and Neo Classical Styles New York a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Waterman Thomas T 1952 The Mansions of Virginia Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press Waterman Thomas T 1950 The Dwellings of Colonial Virginia Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press Grandin Greg 2015 A Tale of Two Plantations by Richard S Dunn New York Times Sunday Book Review New York Retrieved September 23 2015 External links editMount Airy Plantation Official Site Mount Airy State Route 646 vicinity Warsaw Richmond VA 42 photos 3 color transparencies 7 data pages and 5 photo caption pages at Historic American Buildings Survey Mount Airy Barn State Route 646 vicinity Warsaw Richmond VA 1 photo at Historic American Buildings Survey Mount Airy Dairy State Route 646 vicinity Warsaw Richmond VA 1 photo and 1 photo caption page at Historic American Buildings Survey Mount Airy Counting House State Route 646 vicinity Warsaw Richmond VA 1 photo and 1 photo caption page at Historic American Buildings Survey Mount Airy Smokehouse State Route 646 vicinity Warsaw Richmond VA 2 photos and 1 photo caption page at Historic American Buildings Survey Mount Airy Orangery Ruins State Route 646 vicinity Warsaw Richmond VA 2 photos and 1 photo caption page at Historic American Buildings Survey More History about Mount Airy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mount Airy Plantation amp oldid 1208395484, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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