Thursday, December 8, 2011

Intelligent Design - Worthington Forge

Recently I visited Worthington Forge in Doylestown with a client to discuss some custom pieces he wanted to have made. I have had the pleasure to work with Ed Worthington several times over the years to have custom railings, signpost and furniture built. He has not only a talent for the technical aspects of metal work - but also an incredible imagination, visible to anyone passing by his studio on Stump Road. 


Stone and iron animals frolic on the lawn.


The tools of the trade, hung neatly on the wall.


A three headed dragon and scorpion oversee work in the studio.


A stone and iron unicorn rears up on the front lawn.


A colorful piece of work - perhaps a gate or railing - leans against the workbench filled with odds and ends.


Ed is well-known for his "bamboo" style of metal work.


Several leafy clusters sprout from the lawn.


Through the iron reeds you can see the walls of a stone barn.


The color of stone and iron are nearly indistinguishable. 


The weather station holds an anemometer, a rain gauge and smiling sun.


Above the door a spider waits.


A patina-ed collection of evergreens "grows" in from of the real thing.


Ed is quite fond of spiders, these metal ones can be found on his shop and vehicles.


A beautifully detailed set of cattails. 


My client commissioned this beautiful end table in the bamboo-style of metal work.


Thursday, December 1, 2011

"Reports of my death have been greatly exaggerated."

November 30th was Mark Twain's Birthday and so we posted the following message to facebook:

Happy birthday Mark Twain! Did you know he lived at Wave Hill (a beautiful public Garden in NYC) from 1901 to 1902? Of winter there he wrote: “I believe we have the noblest roaring blasts here I have ever known on land; they sing their hoarse song through the tree-tops with a splendid energy that thrills me and uplifts me and makes me want to live always.”

It would have his 176th birthday, Mark Twain was born during a visit by Halley's Comet, and he predicted that he would "go out with it" as well. He died the day following the comet's subsequent return. Twain had been interested in parapsychology most of his life and believed he had also predicted his brother death. He is buried in the Woodlawn Cemetery in Elmira, NY where his wife's family was from and near to where our designer, Sharon, grew up. She can attest that area is also known for its ferocious winters!

In his life Twain achieved great success as a writer and public speaker. A talented author and humorist, his wit and satire earned praise from critics and peers and are still enjoyed to this day! Here is a little history on his one-time home, Wave Hill:

A Brief History of Wave Hill 
1843-1903 
Wave Hill House was built as a country home in 1843 by jurist William Lewis Morris. From 1866-1903 it was owned by William Henry Appleton, who enlarged the house in 1866-69 and again in 1890. A publishing scion, Appleton brought to Wave Hill such pioneering natural scientists as Thomas Henry Huxley. Huxley was astounded by the site, declaring the Palisades across the river one of the world's greatest natural wonders. 

Theodore Roosevelt's family rented Wave Hill during the summers of 1870 and ‘71, when the future president was a youth of 12 and 13. Teddy's time here significantly deepened his love of nature and love of the outdoors that would later prompt him to secure the preservation of millions of acres of American parkland. 

Mark Twain leased the estate from 1901-1903, setting up a treehouse parlor in the branches of a chestnut tree on the lawn. Of winter at Wave Hill he wrote, I believe we have the noblest roaring blasts here I have ever known on land; they sing their hoarse song through the big tree-tops with a splendid energy that thrills me and stirs me and uplifts me and makes me want to live always. 

1903-1960 
In 1903, George W. Perkins, a partner of J.P. Morgan, purchased Wave Hill House. Since 1895 he had been accumulating properties to create a great estate along the river including Oliver Harriman's adjacent villa on the site of what is now Glyndor House. Perkins devoted much of his extraordinary energy to planning the grounds so as to enhance the property's magnificent vistas. To the garden and greenhouses built by Appleton, Perkins added greenhouses, a swimming pool, terraces and the recreational facility that we now call the Ecology Building. The land was graded and contoured, rare trees and shrubs were planted on the broad lawns, and gardens were created to blend harmoniously with the natural beauty of the Hudson River highlands. Across the river, Perkin's involvement at the inception of the Palisades Interstate Park Commission was pivotal in preserving the Palisades. 

The Perkins family resided in Glyndor House and leased Wave Hill House to an eminent zoologist, Bashford Dean. Dean's hobby was collecting medieval European armor, and he built Armor Hall to house his remarkable collection. A selection of 197 choice pieces was subsequently donated to or acquired by the Metropolitan Museum of Art. 

Other famous residents of Wave Hill House have included the conductor Arturo Toscanini (1942-1945) and chief members of the British Delegation to the United Nations (1950-1956). 

Wave Hill Today 
In 1960, the Perkins-Freeman family deeded Wave Hill to the City of New York; Wave Hill, Inc., was formed in 1965 as a non-profit corporation. Today, as one of 34 New York City-owned cultural institutions, Wave Hill's mission is to celebrate the artistry and legacy of its gardens and landscapes, to preserve its magnificent views, and to explore human connections to the natural world through programs in horticulture, education and the arts.

Wave Hill House 
Wave Hill House has been the home of not just one prominent family—but of many. Though unrelated, each successive resident shared an appreciation of Wave Hill's relationship to the Palisades, the Hudson River, and the estate's role in the preservation of Riverdale as a distinctive community. 

The original house was built in Greek Revival style in 1843-44 by William Lewis Morris, a New York City attorney. The Morrises lived here until the death of Mrs. Morris in 1852. William Henry Appleton, a world renowned publisher, bought Wave Hill in 1866 from the Morris heirs. The Appletons used the place as a summer residence. It was leased in 1870-71 to New York banker Theodore Roosevelt, Sr. whose adolescent son developed a love of nature that endured through a lifetime as military hero, conservationist, Governor, and President. Another celebrated tenant, Mark Twain, made Wave Hill a social milieu of literary greats during 1901-03. 

Financier George W. Perkins lived in Glyndor House. He bought Wave Hill House in 1903, and from 1909-1928 leased it to Dr. Bashford Dean, first curator of Arms and Armor at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Dean gained Perkins' approval to build the Armor Hall wing to house his collections. The wing was designed by Fieldston resident, architect Dwight James Baum. Following Dr. Dean's death in 1928, choice pieces of the collection went to the Metropolitan Museum of Art where they are still on view today. 

The Perkins' daughter, Dorothy, and son-in-law, Edward W. Freeman, remodeled the house in 1933. They leased the house to the great maestro Arturo Toscanini from 1942-45; and to the chief British delegates to the UN, Sir Gladwyn Jebb and Sir Pierson Dixon, from 1950-56. In 1960, the Perkins and Freeman families gave the Wave Hill estate to the City of New York. 

Glyndor House 
This house, in Georgian Revival style, is the third to stand on this magnificent site overlooking the Palisades. The first was a Victorian style villa built in the 1860's by the New York financier, Oliver Harriman, called Nonesuch. It was purchased in 1895 by George Walbridge Perkins (1862 -1920). Perkins and his wife, Evelina Ball, remodeled and enlarged the house to include guest rooms and a ballroom with the professional assistance of C. Grant La Farge, architect and son of the famous stained glass artist and designer. Perkins named the transformed house Glyndor (a combination of letters from the names of his family). 

Perkins, with the help of architect Robert M. Byers, created greenhouses, an outdoor swimming pool and a two-story recreation building. The roof of this structure was covered with sod to provide a viewing platform, or terrace, to enjoy the Hudson River and the Palisades. An underground tunnel, lined with Guastavino tiles, connected Glyndor with the recreation building which contained a billiard room, bowling alley and squash court. The location of the recreation building may have been selected by Perkins to help prevent a future grid system of streets in the area; it is directly in the path of a projected street. The recreation building, now known as the Ecology Building, and its rooftop terrace still exist today. The design of the gardens and terraces was conceived, in part, to unify the three estates acquired over time by Perkins. The grey stone building, Wave Hill House, was on one of the parcels acquired by Perkins. Albert Millard, trained as a gardener in Vienna, worked with Perkins on the original layout of the grounds. 

George W. Perkins died at the age of 58 in 1920. In 1926, the house was struck by lightning and severely damaged. Mrs. Perkins had it demolished. The present building, designed by New York architects Butler and Corse, rose on the site in a year's time. In 1960, following Evelina Ball Perkins' passing, the Perkins and Freeman families gave the Wave Hill estate to the City of New York.