Isaac Meason House Explained

Isaac Meason House
Nrhp Type:nhl
Coordinates:39.9539°N -79.6481°W
Area:4acres
Built:1802
Architect:Isaac Meason; Adam Wilson
Architecture:Georgian
Designated Nrhp Type:June 21, 1990[1]
Added:January 25, 1971
Designated Other1 Name:Pennsylvania state historical marker
Designated Other1 Abbr:PHMC
Designated Other1 Date:November 22, 1946[2]
Designated Other1 Link:List of Pennsylvania state historical markers
Designated Other1 Color:navy
Designated Other1 Textcolor:
  1. ffc94b
Refnum:71000707

The Isaac Meason House, also known as Mount Braddock, is a historic house located in Dunbar Township, Fayette County, Pennsylvania. Completed in 1802, it is one of only two surviving Palladian style stone mansions from the period in the United States. Isaac Meason, for whom it was built, was an American Revolutionary War hero and early political power broker in the area, becoming the richest person in Fayette County due to his interest in iron furnaces and possession of enslaved people.[3] [4] The house was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1990 for its architecture.[1] [5]

Description and history

The Isaac Meason House stands outside the hamlet of Mount Braddock, roughly midway between Connellsville and Uniontown at the southern end of Cellurale Drive off United States Route 119. It is prominently sited at the top of a local hill, with a circular stone wall with a gate at its center providing access to its front yard. It is a -story structure built out of locally quarried sandstone with an ashlar finish, and is built following a classical Palladian villa pattern. It has a central main block, flanked symmetrically by narrow hyphens connecting to single-story wings. Small outbuildings are then symmetrically placed beyond the outer wings, with the main driveway passing through the northern gap. The central bays of the center block on both the front and rear elevations are topped by a gabled pediment.[5]

Little is known about Isaac Meason, beyond his origins in Virginia and his success in the Pennsylvania iron industry; he established an iron foundry in Uniontown in 1791, believed to be the first commercially successful operation in the region. This house was built for him by Adam Wilson, a builder about whom little is also known, but is believed to have been brought to the United States from Scotland by Meason. It took about five years to build, and was completed in 1802. While there are a number of formal Palladian-style mansion houses built in the Federal period that survive, most only have a five-part plan, lacking the outbuildings, or have outbuildings built of wood if the main house is masonry. This house is, along with "Mount Airy" in Warsaw, Virginia, one of two that have the full suite of seven elements executed entirely in stone.[5]

The house remained in the Meason family until 1887.[5]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Isaac Meason House. 2007-11-15. National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. https://web.archive.org/web/20110606071645/http://tps.cr.nps.gov/nhl/detail.cfm?ResourceId=1135&ResourceType=Building. 2011-06-06. dead.
  2. Web site: PHMC Historical Markers . Historical Marker Database . Pennsylvania Historical & Museum Commission . December 20, 2013 . https://archive.today/20131207041235/http://search.pahistoricalmarkers.com/ . December 7, 2013 . dead .
  3. Web site: Meason House owners offer to give landmark away if you can dismantle, move it - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20130915233944/http://www.post-gazette.com/stories/ae/art-architecture/meason-house-owners-offer-to-give-landmark-away-if-you-can-dismantle-move-it-703294/. 2013-09-15.
  4. Web site: Young . Cory James . A Just and True Return: Pennsylvania’s Surviving County Slave Registries, 1780-1826 . 2024-06-18 . The Journal of Slavery and Data Preservation . en.
  5. [{{NHLS url|id=71000707}} National Register of Historic Places Registration: Isaac Meason House]. pdf. December 1, 1990 . Dan G. Deibler and George E. Thomas . National Park Service. and