Arlington | |
Nrhp Type: | nhl |
Location: | Main St., Natchez, Mississippi |
Coordinates: | 31.5528°N -91.3925°W |
Built: | 1819–20 |
Architecture: | Colonial, Southern colonial |
Added: | December 12, 1973 |
Designated Nrhp Type: | May 30, 1974[1] |
Refnum: | 73000999 |
Arlington is a historic Federal style house and outbuildings in Natchez, Mississippi. The 55acres property, which includes three contributing buildings, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973. It was further declared a National Historic Landmark in 1974.[1] Following a fire that destroyed much of the main house, it was placed on Mississippi's 10 most endangered historic places for 2009 by the Mississippi Heritage Trust.[2]
Tradition maintains that Arlington was built by John Hampton White, a native of Elizabethtown, New Jersey, and his wife, Jane Surget White. The date that construction of the house began is murky.[3] It is thought by scholars to have been built about 1819–20.[4]
The architect of Arlington is unknown. Its design has historically been attributed to John Hampton White, but no documentation exists to validate the claim. What is documented is that Lewis Evans, a wealthy Natchez planter, purchased the land on which Arlington stands in 1806. Here he established a plantation and built a house. In 1814 he sold a portion of the plantation containing his house to Jonathan Thompson, a land speculator. Thompson then sold the Arlington property, including the house built by Evans, to Mrs. Jane Surget White in December 1818. Jane White was the daughter of Pierre Surget, a French emigrant at the head of one of Natchez's leading families.[3] John Hampton White died on October 15, 1819, during a yellow fever epidemic. Jane White died on July 1, 1825.[5]
The house later came into possession of S. S. Boyd and his descendants.
A photo of Arlington appears in Eudora Welty's Notes on River Country.[6]
Arlington has been considered by architectural historians to be "one of four important Federal Style villas which established the basic form for the later antebellum houses of Natchez."[3] Situated atop a low natural hill, the red brick house is two full stories above a low basement. The exterior of the main block measures 64feetx87feetft (xft).[3]
The front facade is five bays wide, with the three central bays fronted by a tetrastyle portico featuring four monumental Doric columns.[3] The front doorways on both levels are trimmed with radiating brick voussoirs, with carved marble impost blocks and keystones. The openings are each filled by two sidelights withdecorative muntins, and a fanlight around a central door. All of the window openings are enhanced with carved marble sills and lintels.[3]
The interior is divided on both main levels using a central hall plan, with two rooms to each side. The east side features a stair-hall, with a fanlight-topped doorway connecting it to the main hall. The Federal style woodwork of the interior is refined. Of special note are the carved overdoor panels.[3]
Service wings lie to the rear of the main house. At the southeastern corner of the main house is an attached one-story brick wing. It is fronted by a porch with slender, turned columns. At right angles to the one-story wing is a detached, two-story,brick outbuilding. It served as the kitchen and cook's quarters. Attached tothe rear wall of this outbuilding is a one-story, brick carriage house. A two-story barn is situated about 150feet west of the rear courtyard, separated by a geometric boxwood garden.[3]
During the mid-19th century, a full-width monumental portico was added to the rear. It features Doric columns matching those at the front and Greek Revival woodwork underneath. At this time a cast iron porch was added over a central doorway to the stair-hall on the east side of the house and the attached wing was reworked.[3]
Arlington suffered a disastrous fire on September 17, 2002, that destroyed the main roof and much of the second floor. A new roof was built through the efforts of the Historic Natchez Foundation shortly after the fire. Vandals subsequently broke many windows and destroyed or defaced much of the interior and exterior woodwork.[2] [7] Following a lawsuit filed by the Natchez Preservation Commission, the absentee owner was fined on December 2, 2009, in the municipal court of Natchez after being convicted of demolition by neglect.[8]