Revolutionary Real Estate
Statesmen, soldiers and spies who made America and the way they lived
- By Hugh Howard
- Photographs by Roger Straus III
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2007, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 6)
John Adams' "Old House"
Quincy, Massachusetts
John and Abigail Adams bought the home they would call "Old House" in September 1787 while still in England, where John was serving as minister to the Court of Saint James's. When they moved into the house the following spring, they found it confining. To Abigail it resembled a "wren's nest" with all the comfort of a "barracks." The couple added a kitchen ell and inserted two windows to overlook the garden, but just as they settled in, John was elected vice president. He served eight years (1789-1797) in that office and four more as president (1797-1801). Before returning to Massachusetts, the Adamses enlarged Old House, almost doubling its size.
Adams died at age 90, on July 4, 1826—within hours of Thomas Jefferson and 50 years to the day after signing the Declaration of Independence—confident that the experiment the founding fathers had launched would succeed.
George Mason's Gunston Hall
Mason's Neck, Virginia
If you drive the bear from his lair, don't expect him to be happy.
No longer young, George Mason found himself in Richmond, engaged in a pitched parliamentary battle of the sort he despised. Before the Revolution, he had withdrawn from elective politics, nervous about his health and impatient with other men's inflated oratory. Yet like so many of his generation, George Mason (1725–1792) had come back into public life to fight for his ideals and interests.
In the autumn of 1788, he was taking part in one final debate about the shape of the new American government. The Virginia Assembly had convened to ratify the Constitution, which Mason had helped draft the previous year in Philadelphia. But the irascible old militia colonel was there to oppose it, and his harsh arguments disappointed his colleagues. Unwilling to compromise, Mason found himself witnessing the ratification of the Constitution, which lacked what he thought were essential changes regarding individual rights and the balance of powers.
The embittered Mason retreated to his plantation on Dogue's Neck. Eventually, his personal promontory would be renamed Mason's Neck in honor of the old Patriot. But in his lifetime, his determined opposition to the Constitution cost Mason dearly.
From his formal garden, Mason's vista reached to the Potomac, a quarter mile away. He could watch ships departing from his own wharf, carrying his cash crop, tobacco, off to market. He himself had often embarked there on the short journey upstream to dine with George Washington at Mount Vernon. The men had a friendship of long standing. Though Mason had not been trained as a lawyer, Washington had called upon his renowned legal expertise in untangling property disputes, as well as for the revolutionary thinking that would prove to be Mason's most important legacy. The two men served as members of the Truro Parish Vestry, overseeing construction of the Pohick church, where their families worshipped together. In a 1776 letter to the Marquis de Lafayette, Washington summed up their relationship, calling Mason "a particular friend of mine."
Yet what Washington had termed their "unreserved friendship" came to an abrupt end after the events of 1788. The two had had other differences over the years, but the thin-skinned Washington broke off the friendship when Mason opposed ratification. After becoming president a few months later, Washington delegated one of his secretaries to respond to Mason's letters. More pointedly, he referred to Mason in a note to Alexander Hamilton in imperfect Latin as his "quandam [former] friend."
Alexander Hamilton's The Grange
New York, New York
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Comments (6)
history of the founding of america
Posted by Fred McMann on May 10,2008 | 02:41 AM
Very informative. Wish you could have included photos of the places, such as Old House, or artists rendering when possible. Thank you for your wonderful magazine
Posted by Andrea Goodein on April 13,2008 | 06:57 PM
I WAS VERY IMPRESSED WITH HOW HUGH HOWARD WROTE HIS BOOK "HOUSES OF THE FOUNDING FATHERS". WE'VE BEEN LONG OVERDUE FOR SUCH A BOOK ON THE HISTORIC HOUSES OF OUR FORFATHERS. THE ONLY SUCH BOOK THAT I REMEMBER SEEING LAST, THAT WENT INTO SUCH DETAIL WAS AMERICAN HERITAGE'S "GUIDE TO AMERICA'S HISTORIC HOUSES", PUBLISHED BACK IN THE MID 1960'S. THIS BOOK ALSO IS SIMILAR TO GEORGE B. TATUM'S "PHILADELPHIA GEORGIAN - THE POWEL HOUSE AND SOME OF ITS EIGHTEENTH CENTURY PHILADELPHIA NEIGHBORS", PUBLISHED BY THE UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE PRESS IN 1976.
Posted by WILLIAM S. BATES on December 27,2007 | 01:48 PM
Interesting article, both in print and on the e-page. Perhaps more specific location of these houses and if they are open to the public could have been provided.
Posted by Thomas Carriker on December 6,2007 | 05:32 PM
Enjoyed the article about the "Fathers" home places... but very disappointed with this lead to your website... My own Declaration of Independance ancestor is John Hart of New Jersey - I had hoped to trace his real estate following up on your lead in the article. It is my very sincere hope to visit his homestead someday to pay my respects. This man and his family sacrificed a year's spring crop to enable Washington and his troops to have a campsite prior to a surprise attack on the British - and Hart, in retaliation, became a fugitive from British law and was forced into hiding for a couple of years... something of a hardship for anyone in their 50's. Pls let me know how I may access real estate knowledge re John Hart - as your article seemed to promise... and thank you for an always wonderful source of enjoyment and education. Jacqueline Kerr Glendale CA
Posted by Jacqueline Kerr on November 30,2007 | 07:33 PM
Wonderful article! I would like to see an article on Nathaniel Green's home which I understand is not open to the public but is still lived in by descendants and contains many original antiques and personal objects belonging to the General and his family. I also would like an article on Gardner's Island which I think may be the best preserved original pre-Revolutionary War site. One more, how about an article on 'Salubria' probably the most original untouched pre-Revolutionary War home in Virginia. Thanks for a another perspective on our nation's history. You do a wonderful job! Warmest regards, Linda
Posted by Linda Marchetti on November 28,2007 | 07:51 AM