The Great Days of the Garden District, and the Old City of Lafayette
Part 6
An integral part of the landscape design is the limestone balustrade which encloses the garden and runs along the flagstone paving. There are formal boxwood parterres in the back garden and an inviting circular bench which surrounds an exceptionally large sweet olive tree (_Osmanthes fragrans_). The planting around the fish pond includes podicarpus, sasanquas, bottle-brush (_Callistemon lanceolatus_), shrimp plant (_Beloperone guttata_), loquat, viburnums, and barberries. White azaleas in profusion lend springtime beauty.
THOMAS NORTON BERNARD HOUSE 1328 Harmony Street
Strikingly handsome in its simplicity, the Bernard house is often cited as a pure example of a Louisiana raised cottage. Sturdy brick pillars support the wide gallery which is reached by a long flight of steps. Wooden railings are plain while windows to the floor are symmetrically arranged on either side of the recessed doorway.
Long owned by various members of the Bernard family, the cottage exudes family tradition but the builder and construction dates are unknown. Earliest record of the "property with improvements" is 1861. Bernard family lore tells of workmen who were finishing the roof watching Admiral Farragut's fleet steam up the river toward New Orleans in 1862.
The floor plan of the main floor of the house is typical, a wide central hall, in this instance eight feet wide and 33 feet long, which extends from front gallery to back gallery. Behind the characteristic double parlors on the right of the hall an added wing contains dining room and kitchen. All rooms are large, distinguished in proportion but not formal in character. Modernization has been done in an unobstrusive way by the present owners who also corrected alterations done some 20 years ago so that all changes are now compatible with the structure's original lines.
This old house has been adapted skillfully to the needs of an active family with the attic converted for boys' bedrooms and additional rooms in the ground floor basement. The spacious corner lot is landscaped with swimming pool and patio.
GEORGE A. COIRON HOUSE 2926 St. Charles Avenue
A delightful Southern home with many galleries to catch the breezes, the Coiron house dates from 1882, yet it was designed and built in the manner of dwellings of the 1860 period. The architect is unknown but the original owner was one Thomas McDermott, who resided there for many years with his two maiden sisters.
Older Garden District residents still recall McDermott sitting on the little porch off the dining room every summer evening, smoking his cigar until dusk. One charming eccentricity of the McDermott sisters earned them a place in the ranks of colorful individuals who have made the Garden District their home. When the garden produced no live blooms, these old ladies pinned paper flowers to the hedge on the Seventh Street side of the property.
Subsequent owners of the house were Mrs. Hughella Virginia McCloskey, Henry Mooney, Ernest Scipio Myers, Mr. and Mrs. Morris Legendre, and, by bequest of the Legendres, Christ Church Cathedral.
Extensive restoration work was done by the present owners Mr. and Mrs. George A. Coiron, Jr., after they purchased the house in 1964 from Mrs. Sylvia Reiner, who had acquired it from the Cathedral.
During the renovation, interesting construction details of this finely built house were revealed. Year-round comfort was assured inside the house by the original designer who left air chambers between the inner and outer walls, which are braced some 12 inches apart. Every room has a balcony or gallery.
Above the front door is the number 710, etched in France, which was the original street numeral on St. Charles Avenue before the municipal numbering system was changed in 1895.
A bit of history attaches to the iron fence and gates which were installed in 1934 by Mr. Myers. The rear gate, originally from old Spanish Fort, had been purchased for $35 from a junk man who got it when the popular lakefront amusement park was demolished.
JOHN B. HOBSON HOUSE 1224 Jackson Avenue
Particularly charming, this raised cottage is one of the few remaining vestiges of the elegance of the homes along Jackson Avenue during the early days of the Garden District.
Research by Samuel Wilson, Jr., architectural historian, establishes that the house was built around the time of the War Between the States by a man named Swain, who previously had resided in a house on the corner of Philip and Chestnut streets. In 1869 it was the property of Louis Schneider. In May of 1881 the house was sold to Isaac West, whose family lived there until 1929, when it was purchased by the Kilpatricks. They in turn sold to Mr. and Mrs. Paul Pigman. Mr. and Mrs. John B. Hobson bought the house in 1962.
The beautiful façade is embellished by a deep cornice, fluted Corinthian columns and lovely "iron lace" in a pattern of lyres and flowers. Instead of the usual symmetrical arrangement of windows on either side of the central doorway, the Hobson house has a gentle bay on the left side. Originally the house had a large rear wing which was destroyed by fire in the 1950's.
Inside the house are found ornate and elegant plaster moldings and ceiling medallions. A spiral stairway rises dramatically to the second floor from the wide central hall. The Hobsons have furnished the house with a collection of 18th century English antiques.
CHESTER A. MEHURIN HOUSE 1427 Second Street
This dignified and handsome Greek Revival house has been the property of Mr. and Mrs. Chester A. Mehurin since 1948. During their long period of ownership, the Mehurin's have completely restored the house, under the supervision of Koch-Wilson architects, made some additions and also delved into the interesting history of the property.
The house was probably built by Mrs. Jane Fawcett, widow of James D'Arcy, on this ground which she purchased in 1845, in the rear of her other property facing First Street that she had purchased the year previous. According to Mrs. Dagmar Renshaw LeBreton in "A Tour of the Garden District" the D'Arcy-Mehurin house was part of a large plantation home moved here by the D'Arcy's in the early 1850's and then added to. Such house moving was not uncommon during that early period, strange as it may seem.
A number of architectural features help establish the date of the house as circa 1850. The ceilings are only 12 feet high and the doors were originally single width. The door moldings are in the same pattern as those in the Pontalba buildings, also created in the 1850's.
At the time of Mrs. D'Arcy's death in 1885 the house was under lease to Dr. Henry D. Bruns and was described as "a commodious and well-built two-story and attic frame-slated residence, with hall in the center, and contains parlor, library, dining room, kitchen, etc. and some numerous bedrooms above. Bathroom, pantry, etc., with marble mantels and gas-light fixtures throughout. Embellished yard and garden, two cisterns, sheds, etc. Stylish appearance, choice neighborhood."
In 1907 the house was acquired by Mrs. Henry C. Miller, whose daughter Miss Lottie Miller conducted a fine private school for girls there until about 1931 when Dr. John H. Musser bought the place. The ironwork on the house was added at that period. The Mehurin's purchased the house from Dr. Musser's estate. Many old out-buildings, including a wine cellar, were removed by the present owners so that the present garden could be established.
LELAND S. MONTGOMERY HOUSE 1506 Seventh Street
Although the architect and builder of this stately mansion are unknown, it was probably constructed in the 1850's. A delightful rendering in water color of the house as it appeared in 1865 is in the notarial archives of Orleans Parish.
This charming painting shows the house without the library with bedroom above which was added to the south side of the house in 1890. Details such as the columns--Ionic on the lower gallery, Corinthian above--and the curved flagstone walk from the entrance on Seventh street are clearly shown. This rendering indicates that the present large drawing-room was, at that time, a double parlor, perhaps separated by an arch. The former servant's ell, extending back from the dining room, was so deteriorated that when Mr. and Mrs. Leland S. Montgomery purchased the house in 1961, they demolished that wing and had the present kitchen, breakfast room and playroom added in keeping with the style of the original house. The Montgomerys also had the wooden front porch floor replaced with one of flagstones that came from the front walk.
Interestingly, the original owners of the house were named Montgomery, but no relation to the present owners. The leaded glass of the front door is etched with an "M", placed there circa 1912 by the third owners of the house, whose name was Morgan.
Many interior embellishments of the house are original to the structure. In the living room the brass and bronze gas chandeliers, now electrified, are original as are the French cornices over the windows.
BILLUPS P. PERCY HOUSE 1236 First Street
Majestically situated on a large corner lot abounding in typical Southern shrubs and towering magnolia trees the Percy house is a fine example of the Greek Revival style. All the components of a classic Garden District mansion are here--double galleries, fluted Corinthian columns, iron grillwork, and a deep but simple cornice above the top porch.
A characteristic floor plan, as indicated from the arrangement of windows and the door in the façade, was to have all major rooms on the south side (the preferred exposure) of a long hall. The present owners of the home, Mr. and Mrs. Billups P. Percy have modified this arrangement by the addition of a library on the north side of the house.
One of the oldest structures in the Garden District, the Percy house was erected in 1847 by John W. Gayle for his young bride. It was passed to its present owners through several ownerships, including the Alfred Le Blance family who resided here for fifty years.
In the interior of the house are to be noted such familiar antebellum hallmarks as black marble mantels, plaster ceiling rosettes and crystal chandeliers. In addition to the English, French and Italian antiques in the house, an item of special interest is an oil portrait of the late William Alexander Percy, Mississippi poet, author of the autobiographical "Lanterns on the Levee" and the adoptive father of Billups Percy.
ALBERT J. RUHLMAN HOUSE 2336 St. Charles Avenue
This early Louisiana cottage, believed to date from the 1840's, looks today much as it did when the little railroad on Nayades Street brought wealthy business men from their offices downtown out to their palatial Garden District homes.
The façade of the house is symmetrically lovely, distinguished by the wooden railing in a diamond-shaped design, so seldom found today. Typical of the best features of homes of this period are the wide center hall, high ceilings, double parlors, cypress woodwork with hand-hammered door knobs, heart pine floors and handsome window glass. Window and door frames are in the so-called keyhole design.
The present owners of the house, Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. Ruhlman have furnished it with pieces contemporary with the era of its construction. Particularly noteworthy is the collection of furniture by Prudent Mallard, a native of France who worked in New Orleans from 1840-79. The Mallard sideboard in the dining room is of peg and hole construction, no nails of any kind having been used. Also the work of Mallard are two bedroom sets, one with a half tester, the other with full tester. Among the other interesting Mallard furniture are two chairs and a prie dieu which were once possessions of the master cabinetmaker himself.
JOSEPH V. SCHLOSSER HOUSE 1240 Sixth Street
After undergoing varied and not always felicitous usages during its long history, this handsome double galleried frame house is once again what it was originally, a fine private dwelling.
Estimated by Koch and Wilson, architects for the restoration, to have been built between 1866 and 1868, the house for many years was the Music School of the original Sophie Newcomb High School and College. The school's main campus was in the square directly across the street, as described earlier in this book. When Newcomb relocated, the property was acquired by the Baptist Bible Institute, which divided the huge rooms of the dwelling into six apartments, all with individual baths and kitchens.
After Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Schlosser purchased the house in 1953, many months of planning preceded the restoration. In addition to removing the apartment arrangements, the Schlossers had the house completely rock-lathed, replastered, repainted, replumbed, re-wired and insulated. From 11 to 15 coats of paint were removed from the original woodwork.
The entrance door and the stair railing are solid mahogany. The pair of black and gold Austrian marble mantels in the living room and library came from Uncle Sam plantation. This sugar plantation, owned by Pierre Auguste Samuel Fagot, had been one of the most magnificent in Louisiana. In the dining room the marble mantel came from a house, now destroyed, designed by the celebrated architect Henry Howard.
The Schlosser's have furnished their home with antiques and a notable collection of paintings by Ellsworth and William Woodward. William Woodward, a native of New Hampshire, was the first professor of Art and Architecture at Tulane and his brother Ellsworth founded the Art School of Newcomb College.
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
Bickle, Lucy Leffingwell Cable. _George W. Cable: His Life and Letters._ New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1928. Briede, Kathryn C. _A History of the City of Lafayette._ Unpublished thesis. Howard-Tilton Library of Tulane University. Cable, George Washington. _The Creoles of Louisiana._ New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1889. Carter, Hodding and Betty Werlein Carter. _So Great a Good._ Sewanee, Tennessee: University Press, 1955. Castellanos, Henry C. _New Orleans As It Was._ New York: L. Graham and Son, 1895. Chase, John Churchill. _Frenchmen, Desire, Good Children ... and Other Streets of New Orleans._ New Orleans: Robert L. Crager and Co., 1949. Clapp, Theodore. _Autobiographical Sketches and Recollections._ Boston: Phillips, Sampson and Co., 1859. Fortier, Alcee. _A History of Louisiana_, 4 vols. New York: Mansi, Joyant and Co., 1904. Kendall, John Smith. _History of New Orleans_, 3 vols. Chicago: Lewis Publishing Co., 1922. King, Grace. _Creole Families of New Orleans._ New York: Macmillan Co., 1921. ____. _New Orleans, The Place and the People._ New York: Macmillan and Co., 1895. leBreton, Dagmar Renshaw; Ethel Wight Usher and Marcel Peret. _A Tour of the Garden District._ New Orleans: American Association of University Women, 1942. Martin, Francois-Xavier. _The History of Louisiana._ New Orleans: James A. Gresham, 1882. Ralph, Julian. _Dixie, or Southern Scenes and Sketches._ New York: Harper and Bros., 1896. Renshaw, James A. "The Lost City of Lafayette", _Louisiana Historical Quarterly_, II (1919), 47-55. Smith, Sol. _Theatrical Management._ New York: Harper and Bros., 1868. Soniat, Meloncy C. "The Faubourgs Forming the Upper Section of the City of New Orleans", _Louisiana Historical Quarterly_, XX (1937), 192-211. Twain, Mark. _Life on the Mississippi._ Boston: James R. Osgood and Co., 1883. Wilson, Samuel, Jr. _A Guide to Architecture of New Orleans--1699-1959._ New York: Reinhold Publishing Corp., 1959. City Directories of New Orleans and Lafayette City. Various issues of _Louisiana Spectator_, _Lafayette City Advertiser_, _Southern Traveler_, _The Louisiana Statesman_, and New Orleans newspapers. Articles by John W. Coleman, _The New Orleans States_, 1922-1925. Microfilm of diary of Thomas Kelah Wharton, 1853-1862, in Howard-Tilton Library. (Original in New York Public Library.) Minutes of the Police Jury of Jefferson Parish, 1834-1843. The Ordinances and Resolutions of the City of Lafayette, 1852. Map by Louise Renes Trufant and Randall Genung, 1940.
Transcriber's Notes
--Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook is public-domain in the country of publication.
--Silently corrected a few palpable typos.
--In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by _underscores_.