"DAR House Tour
of 1949" Touring historic houses has been popular since Mt. Vernon opened as the nation's first house museum in the 1850s. An early tour of Carroll County homes, sponsored by the William Winchester Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, took place fifty years ago. A description of the houses appeared in the September 29, 1949 issue of this newspaper: |
'Hidden
Valley,' the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Pickens, is so called because it is a little
valley surrounded by acres and acres of woods. The
house is of brick and was built by Lee Stone in 1868, reportedly for his intended bride,
Miss Lydia Circle. For some reason, this marriage was never consummated. Other owners included David Stuller, William
Himes, John D. Roop, Jacob Martin, the Archibalds, Roy Utt before the Pickens acquired
title. Furnishings in the house include
heirlooms from the Gist family. Mrs. Pickens,
a member of the chapter, is a direct descendant of General Mordecai Gist, of Revolutionary
fame.
Just off the road from Westminster to Taneytown
lies 'Glenburn,' built by Rogers Birnie, son of Clotworthy Birnie, in 1840. He was educated at Yale. Later, in order to take care of the education of
his sons, he started a boy's school. Pupils
came from Baltimore and the surrounding country. Some
of the names can be seen carved on the old wagon shed.
A few of the familiar names on the roster are: Witherspoon, Steele, Davidson, Turner, Snively,
McComas, McCormick, Cushing, McGonable. The
present owners are Mr. and Mrs. Chester Neal.
Making an imposing sight from the Taneytown road,
just beyond here, is 'Thorndale,' purchased by Mr. and Mrs. Frank Parrish in 1941. It was built by Clotworthy Birnie in 1832. He came from Belfort, Ireland, in 1810 and settled
on the tract of land, part of Runnymeade, originally owned by Dr. Upton Scott, his uncle. From 1837 to 1872, a private school for girls was
conducted here. This school offered an
'English education' to young ladies, including needlework, religious instruction and the
traditional academic subjects. Board and
tuition$110.00 a term. Two sessions
were divided by a month's vacation in the fall and in the spring.
In Taneytown, the home of Mr. and Mrs. B. Walter
Crapster on East Baltimore street, will be open, Mrs. Crapster being a member of the local
chapter. This land was originally a part of
'Antrim,' and was bought by Mrs. Crapster's grandfather, James M. Neely. Interesting histories are told about many of the
lovely heirlooms which furnish the house, some of which belonged to the Dorsey, Neal and
Long families. The collection of glass and
china is noteworthy.
On the road from Taneytown to Uniontown stands
'Trevanion,' the forty-room brick mansion built by David Kephart in 1817, to meet the
wants of his growing family and to take the place of the smaller dwelling, on land bought
from Samuel Cookson in 1792. The mason work
of the front is what is called 'Flemish Bond,' the windows have white marble sills and
lintels. A tower room in front, evidently of
later construction, runs three floors to it roof. The
slave dungeon and bake house still stand, but the shops famous in their day, are now gone. The tract on which the house stands now contains
seven acres, the farm of 360 acres having been sold separately. The present owners are Dr. and Mrs. Thomas H.
Legg, of Union Bridge, who have put the house in sound condition, but have not changed the
main features. The house stands about fifty
yards from the junction of Meadow Branch and Pipe Creek.
'Mount Lofty Homestead,' near Uniontown, is the
next in line and is a portion of 250 acres which was sold by George Etzler, of Heidleburg,
Pa., to Adam Schweigert for 665 lbs. English
money on November 3, 1794. The house was
built on or about 1800. The property is now
owned by Mr. and Mrs. Russell B. Pieffer, Waynesboro, Pa., members of Mrs. Pieffer's
family, the Roops having brought it in 1845. During
the Civil War, Grandmother Roop and her daughter, Mary Englar, baked bread in the oven,
now in good condition, for soldiers of the 1st and 11th Corps of the Army of the Potomac,
as they passed through June 29, 1863. The
herb drier is one of the few now in existence in Maryland.
'Avalon Farm,' near New Windsor, is the eighth
house on the list. The brick house was built
in 1789 by a Mr. Hollingsworth. The circular
hanging stairway in the house is of unusual beauty and of fine proportions; its massive
doors with the original hardware; and its fine woodwork lend enchantment to the atmosphere
created by the present owners, Mr. and Mrs. F. Donald Shriver, with family antiques and
kindred pieces. They bought it in 1935. This is the property which Jesse Slingluff,
Baltimore banker, purchased in 1812 and brought his family here to be safe from the
British. It was owned until 1912 by members
of his family.
Coming from New Windsor to Westminster, the blue arrows, denoting the open houses, will point to 'English Chance,' the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Morrow, in the fertile Wakefield Valley. This tract is part of the original grant made to John England about 1760. The present house is a simple modern farm house, consisting of an old log house with a frame house joined to it at a later date. Modern conveniences demonstrate how the life of a present-day farmer's wife may be made easy.
Nearby is the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Morrow,
the former a brother of Charles Morrow and a business man of Baltimore. The house was built in 1946 as a weekend cottage
to be used during the summer. The site was
chosen because of its incomparable view and unfailing cool breezes. On a clear day, the Blue Ridge Mountains are
visible from Big Round Top at Gettysburg to Point o' Rocks in Virginia.
The house in Westminster open to visitors is the
home of Mrs. M. S. H. Unger, a past regent of the William Winchester Chapter. It is a typical Georgian house whose architect was
John Russell Pope. Elegant simplicity is the
keynote of the plan, modeled after a Colonial brick house built about 1740 in the vicinity
of Yorktown. Of special interest are the
clipped peaks of the gables. On display for
visitors will be rare old books, manuscripts, pictures, furniture, china and silver, which
have been cherished possessions of the family for generations. The house was built in 1931 by Mrs. Unger and the
late Dr. Unger. Its old trees and added
shrubbery provide a setting for this home which enhances the corner of Green street and
the New Windsor road." |
| The 1939 tour proceeds went to several
special historical projects including rehabilitation at Ellis Island and Valley Forge.
|
| Photo caption: | Trevanion, described as a forty-room
brick mansion near Uniontown, was open for a DAR house tour in 1949. Historical Society of Carroll County Collection. |