Photo, Print, Drawing Mount Airy, Barn, 361 Millpond Road (State Route 646), Warsaw, Richmond County, VA Mount Airy, Stable John Tayloe Plantation, Stable Colonial Williamsburg Agricultural Buildings Project
About this Item
Title
- Mount Airy, Barn, 361 Millpond Road (State Route 646), Warsaw, Richmond County, VA
Other Title
- Mount Airy, Stable John Tayloe Plantation, Stable Colonial Williamsburg Agricultural Buildings Project
Names
- Historic American Buildings Survey, creator
- Tayloe, John, II
- Peterson, Charles E., photographer
- Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, sponsor
- Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, Architectural Research Department, sponsor
- Grainger Department of Architectural Preservation and Research, sponsor
- Arzola, Robert R., project manager
- Klee, Jeffrey E., program coordinator
- Lavoie, Catherine C., editor
- Webster, Matthew, program manager
- Campbell, Emily, program coordinator
- Wilkoski, Jennifer , researcher
- Chappell, Edward A., project manager
- Graham, William J., field team supervisor
- Ray, Robert, field team
- Schara, Mark, field team
- Tragash, Todd B., field team
- McPartland, Mary, transmitter
Created / Published
- Documentation compiled after 1933
Headings
- - barns
- - plantations
- - agriculture
- - domestic life
- - farming
- - country life
- - sandstone
- - outbuildings
- - rubble
- - lean-tos
- - louvers
- - shutters
- - lofts
- - window grilles
- - grilles
- - American common bond
- - plaster walls
- - pegs
- - stalls
- - cast ironwork
- - Virginia--Richmond County--Warsaw
Latitude / Longitude
- 37.972651,-76.791078
Notes
- - Significance: The Stable is one of numerous significant dependencies and outbuildings at Mount Airy Plantation. Situated on the Rappahannock River, the centerpiece of the plantation is the five-part, neo-Palladian plantation house built in 1748-1758 for wealthy planter John Tayloe II to replace an earlier house. The house is the most architecturally sophisticated of Virginia’s surviving colonial mansions. While the designer is unknown, the stone facades are adapted from a design in James Gibbs’s Book of Architecture (1728), and the interior finishes are the work of architect and joiner William Buckland. The Tayloes’ eighteenth- and nineteenth-century preoccupation with racehorses is expressed by the presence at Mount Airy of what for Virginia was an extremely substantial stable. Long considered to be a representative survival, it has provided models for reconstructed details at Stratford Hall in Westmoreland County and the Governor’s Palace and Wythe complex in Williamsburg.
- - Survey number: HABS VA-72-A
- - Building/structure dates: ca. 1805 Initial Construction
- - National Register of Historic Places NRIS Number: 66000845
Medium
- Photo(s): 1
- Measured Drawing(s): 5
- Data Page(s): 5
Call Number/Physical Location
- HABS VA,80-WAR.V,4A-
Source Collection
- Historic American Buildings Survey (Library of Congress)
Repository
- Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print
Control Number
- va1222
Rights Advisory
- No known restrictions on images made by the U.S. Government; images copied from other sources may be restricted. https://aj.sunback.homes/rr/print/res/114_habs.html
Online Format
- image
Part of
Format
Contributor
- Arzola, Robert R.
- Campbell, Emily
- Chappell, Edward A.
- Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
- Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, Architectural Research Department
- Graham, William J.
- Grainger Department of Architectural Preservation and Research
- Historic American Buildings Survey
- Klee, Jeffrey E.
- Lavoie, Catherine C.
- McPartland, Mary
- Peterson, Charles E.
- Ray, Robert
- Schara, Mark
- Tayloe, John, II
- Tragash, Todd B.
- Webster, Matthew
- Wilkoski, Jennifer