Sunday, February 16, 2025

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 Worshipful Company of Carpenters

The Worshipful Company of Carpenters is a livery company of the City of London. The Carpenters were traditionally different from a fellow wood-crafting company, the Worshipful Company of Joiners and Ceilers, in that carpenters utilised nails while joiners used adhesives to attach woodThe Worshipful Company of Carpenters coat of arms

Entrance to Carpenters Hall in Throgmorton Avenue

The organisation existed in 1271; it received a Royal Charter of incorporation in 1477. As is the case with most of the other livery companies, the Company no longer has a role as a trade association of tradesmen and craftsmen. Instead, it acts as a charitable institution and supports education in wood-related fields.

In 1767 the Company purchased an estate at Stratford, London. In 1886 it opened an evening institute on the Carpenters Estate there, offering classes in carpentry, joinery, plumbing, geometry, mechanical drawing and cookery. In 1891, the Carpenter's Institute had become a day school for boys. The school closed in 1905 when the local authority opened its own school.

The Company ranks twenty-sixth in the order of precedence of livery companies. The Company's motto is "Honour God". Its guild church is All Hallows-on-the-Wall, where the Company has held its annual elections for over 600 years. The livery hall, Carpenters Hall, is at Throgmorton Avenue; it is a Grade II listed building.

Founded in 1724, the Carpenters' Company of the City and County of Philadelphia was modelled after the Worshipful Company of Carpenters.



Saturday, February 15, 2025

 Lockwood–Mathews Mansion

The Lockwood–Mathews Mansion is a Second Empire style country house in Norwalk, Connecticut. Now a museum, it was built in 1864-68 for railroad and banking magnate LeGrand Lockwood. The 62-room 44,000 square feet (4,100 m2) mansion was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1978.



Lockwood–Mathews Mansion

U.S. National Register of Historic Places

U.S. National Historic Landmark


South side of the mansion

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Wikimedia | © OpenStreetMap

Interactive map showing the location of Lockwood-Mathews Mansion

Location

295 West Avenue,

Norwalk, Connecticut

Coordinates

41°6′31.68″N 73°25′1.56″W

Built

1864

Architect

Detlef Lienau

Architectural style

Second Empire

NRHP reference No.

70000836

Significant dates

Added to NRHP

December 30, 1970

Designated NHL

December 30, 1970


It has been described as "one of the earliest and finest surviving Second Empire style country houses ever built in the United States." It sits at 295 West Ave., in Mathews Park, where the Stepping Stones Museum for Children is also located.

History


As private home

Railroad and banking magnate LeGrand Lockwood

The home was built on an estate, then called "Elm Park," for LeGrand Lockwood, who made his fortune in banking and the railroad industry. Construction began in 1864 just west of the Norwalk River in Norwalk and was completed four years later. Designed by European-trained, New York-based architect Detlef Lienau, the 44,000 square feet (4,100 m2) mansion features 26,402 square feet (2,452.8 m2) of living space and "is considered his most significant surviving work," according to the association. Both American and immigrant artisans worked to construct and decorate the house.

 Prominent New York decorating firms, including Herter Brothers and Leon Marcotte were contracted to furnish the mansion's interiors.

Financial reversals in 1869 and Lockwood's death in 1872 resulted in loss of the estate through foreclosure in 1874 by Lockwood's heirs.

Charles D. Mathews, described in his New York Times obituary as "a very wealthy retired New-York provision dealer", and his wife, Rebecca Thompson Mathews, bought the property in 1876. The mansion was a residence and suburban retreat for the Mathews family, with their Thompson and Martin relatives, until the death of Charles's daughter Florence in 1938.

As museum


 West side of the home seen from the south, showing porte-cochere and greenhouse

Built in 1864–68, the home is an early example of the style used by wealthy New York City elites such as the Vanderbilts in building their Gilded Age mansions later in the 19th century, and set a new standard for opulence.

In 1941 the estate was sold to the City of Norwalk, which designated it a public park. The city had planned in 1959 "to build a city hall in the park and tear down the mansion to make way for it." Considerable controversy and claims of bad faith ensued, leaving the building threatened with demolition. Local preservationists formed Lockwood–Mathews Mansion Museum, Inc. to run the site.

The Junior League of Stamford-Norwalk eventually led a late 1960s restoration, supported by the National Trust for Historic Preservation, the American Institute of Architects, the National Park Service, and the Connecticut Historical Commission.

The home was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1971.

According to the museum organization's Web site, the museum's mission "is to conserve the building while creating educational programs on the material, artistic and social culture of the Victorian era," .

A master plan for a more comprehensive restoration of the mansion was expected to be completed in 2007.

Plans for renovation work at the museum include adding an elevator, and systems for heating, air conditioning, and sprinklers. Renovation costs are likely to total about $6 million, museum officials said in May 2007, before the master plan was complete.

In a decades-long Christmastime tradition, interior decorators deck out about a dozen rooms in the mansion with holiday decorations. An annual "community celebration" is held in December with Christmas music, refreshments and a Santa Claus. In 2007, 10 interior decorators volunteered their services and materials for the event.

The museum has hosted an annual antique show since 1978. In 2006 the show was held the last weekend in October and attracted dealers from Ohio and Pennsylvania as well as Connecticut.

In the 2000s, statues and furniture that had originally been in the mansion were bought and placed back in it. Two marble statues, sculpted in 1859 by Joseph Mozier, an American artist, and bought by Lockwood, were purchased for $185,000. A $165,000 sofa original to the home was also acquired and brought back to it.

The home was used as a filming location for the 2004 remake of The Stepford Wives. Paramount Pictures paid the museum $400,000 to paint its central rotunda. The studio also left behind some large paintings (in essence, theatrical pastiches), which serve to emphasize the dramatic size of the rotunda. As a result, the walls look fresh and decorated, and will remain protected until further funds become available for proper, curatorial restoration of the original damaged surfaces.

The mansion was also featured in the movie House of Dark Shadows.

 



Thursday, February 13, 2025

Woodpro steel carpenter carpentry services norwalk ct us.

 Haviland and Elizabeth Streets–Hanford Place Historic District


The Haviland and Elizabeth Streets–Hanford Place Historic District is an irregularly shaped 4.3-acre (1.7 ha) historic district in Norwalk, Connecticut that was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.

 It encompasses a neighborhood that developed in the late 19th century following the introduction of railroad service to South Norwalk.



Haviland and Elizabeth Streets–Hanford Place Historic District

U.S. National Register of Historic Places

U.S. Historic district


Houses on Hanford Place



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Location

Roughly bounded by Haviland, Day Sts., Hanford Pl., and S. Main St., Norwalk, Connecticut

Coordinates

41°5′49″N 73°25′7″W

Area

4.3 acres (1.7 ha)

Architectural style

Second Empire, Italianate, Queen Anne

NRHP reference No.

88000664

Added to NRHP

May 26, 1988


Description and history


The district lies within a primarily commercial area of the South Norwalk neighborhood.: 1  It includes 36 contributing buildings and 2 non-contributing ones.

 The district is significant as a cohesive grouping of late 19th and early 20th century residential architecture. Eight houses are Queen Anne style, which involves irregular massing and use of turned or sawn woodwork in porches and elsewhere. Others display Colonial Revival elements, including Tuscan columns on some. Some are Italianate or display aspects of that style. Second Empire style is also represented.: 3 

Prior to the arrival of the railroad station and depot in South Norwalk in 1870, the area was economically focused on the waterfront, with oyster fishing its primary industry. The railroad spurred the introduction of factories and industrial production, resulting in the related growth of residential housing and a thriving commercial district. This historic district encompasses a cross section of residential architecture from this period of growth.

Listed buildings


The buildings included in the district are:

3 Elizabeth Street, Colonial Revival vernacular, c. 1900 (see accompanying photo #6)

5 Elizabeth Street, Queen Anne, c. 1900 (see accompanying photo #6)

7 Elizabeth Street, Queen Anne, c. 1900 (see accompanying photo #6)

8 Elizabeth Street, Italianate, c. 1875, with Colonial Revival entrance porch

9 Elizabeth Street, c. 1870 (see accompanying photo #6)

rear of 9 Elizabeth Street, c. 1920 (see accompanying photo #7)

9 Elizabeth Street, 3 bay fieldstone garage (see accompanying photo #15): 6, 18 

10 Elizabeth Street, Italianate vernacular, c. 1875 with Queen Anne style porch

11 Elizabeth Street, Italianate, c. 1880

12 Elizabeth Street

13 Elizabeth Street

14 Elizabeth Street

15 Elizabeth Street

17 Elizabeth Street, Italianate, c.1885: 9 

2 Hanford Place, Queen Anne, c. 1880 (see photos #13 and #19): 9 

3 Hanford Place

4 Hanford Place

5 Hanford Place

6 Hanford Place

7 Hanford Place

8 Hanford Place

9 Hanford Place

10 Hanford Place, Queen Anne, c.1890

11 Hanford Place, Queen Anne, c.1880, includes a barn or carriagehouse (see photo #15): 6, 18 

12 Hanford Place

8 Haviland Street

10 Haviland Street, non-contributing

12 Haviland Street

16 Haviland Street

18 Haviland Street (see photo #4): 18 

20 Haviland Street (see photo #4): 18 

22 Haviland Street (see photo #5): 18 

24 Haviland Street

26 Haviland Street

72 South Main Street (see accompanying photos #3 and #20): 6, 20 

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