File:Manse, Frederick and Coalter Streets, Staunton, Staunton, VA HABS VA,8-STAU,2- (sheet 8 of 8).tif
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Summary
[edit]HABS VA,8-STAU,2- (sheet 8 of 8) - Manse, Frederick and Coalter Streets, Staunton, Staunton, VA | |||||
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Title |
HABS VA,8-STAU,2- (sheet 8 of 8) - Manse, Frederick and Coalter Streets, Staunton, Staunton, VA |
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Description |
T. J. Collins and Son; Wilson, Woodrow, owner |
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Depicted place | Virginia; Staunton; Staunton | ||||
Date | Documentation compiled after 1933 | ||||
Dimensions | 19 x 24 in. (B size) | ||||
Current location |
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print |
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Accession number |
HABS VA,8-STAU,2- (sheet 8 of 8) |
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Credit line |
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Notes |
As summarized by the Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library and Museum: In January 1846, church session minutes record an appropriation for building the manse. Mrs. Smith's father, the Reverend James Morrison of Rockbridge County, Virginia wrote, "The congregation has contracted to have a house built for Mr. Smith, which it is said will be the best house in Staunton when it is finished. The lot on which it is to be built is one of the most beautiful situations in Staunton. . ." The ladies of the church held a fair in June 1846 and raised $300 to pay the balance on purchase of the building lot. The handsome Manse erected on the lot may have been designed by the Reverend Rufus W. Bailey, founder of Augusta Female Seminary in 1842 (now Mary Baldwin College), and designer of its classical main building (1844), for he served on the church's building committee. The manse and the college's old building are strikingly similar in style. Builder of the manse was John Fifer of Augusta County. Church records indicate that the total cost of constructing the 12-room Greek Revival style brick house with its center halls and four chimneys was about $4,000. In December 1854, the Reverend Joseph Ruggles Wilson, a professor at Hampden-Sydney College, accepted a call to be pastor of Staunton Presbyterian Church. Mr. Wilson, his wife, Jessie Woodrow Wilson, and their daughters Marion and Annie moved into the Staunton manse in March 1855. One year and nine months later on December 28, 1856 the third Wilson child was born "at 12 3/4 o'clock at night" as his proud father recorded in the family Bible. The child was named Thomas Woodrow Wilson for his maternal grandfather. Only four ministers' families occupied the manse following the Wilson family. To cover debts from construction of a new church, the Presbyterian trustees sold two sections of the large lot surrounding the manse in 1874. Following President Wilson's death in 1924, the trustees of Mary Baldwin College determined to raise funds for a memorial building to the President. The congregation of First Presbyterian Church gave its approval in 1925 to the sale of the manse to the college for $30,000 and the college held it until a group could be formed to preserve and interpret the home as a Birthplace museum for the late President of the United States. The Woodrow Wilson Birthplace Foundation was established in 1938. The first restoration of the manse started in 1940 and was completed in 1941 bringing the Presbyterian Manse back to its appearance of 1856 when Thomas Woodrow Wilson was born. In May 1941 President Franklin Delano Roosevelt came to Staunton to dedicate the restored Woodrow Wilson Birthplace as a "shrine to freedom."
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Source | https://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/va0258.sheet.00008a | ||||
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current | 05:00, 4 August 2014 | 9,316 × 7,584 (798 KB) | Fæ (talk | contribs) | GWToolset: Creating mediafile for Fæ. HABS 2014-08-02 (3401:3600) |
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Author | Library of Congress |
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Width | 9,316 px |
Height | 7,584 px |
Compression scheme | CCITT Group 4 fax encoding |
Pixel composition | Black and white (White is 0) |
Orientation | Normal |
Number of components | 1 |
Number of rows per strip | 7 |
Horizontal resolution | 400 dpi |
Vertical resolution | 400 dpi |
Data arrangement | chunky format |
File change date and time | 17:49, 3 August 2000 |