Barrow Mansion

Barrow Mansion
Dr. William Barrow Mansion
The Barrow Mansion in 2010.
Barrow Mansion is located in New Jersey
Location: 83 Wayne Street, Jersey City, New Jersey
Coordinates: 40°43′12″N 74°2′56″W / 40.72°N 74.04889°W / 40.72; -74.04889Coordinates: 40°43′12″N 74°2′56″W / 40.72°N 74.04889°W / 40.72; -74.04889
Area: 0.1 acres (0.040 ha)
Built: 1835-1837
Architect: Van Vorst,Cornelius
Architectural style: Greek Revival
Governing body: Private
NRHP Reference#: 77000872[1]
NJRHP #: 1459[2]
Significant dates
Added to NRHP: May 2, 1977
Designated NJRHP: December 20, 1976

The Dr. William Barrow Mansion, is located in Downtown Jersey City, New Jersey.The mansion was added to the National Register of Historic Places on May 2, 1977 and is located within the Van Vorst Park Historic District, which itself was dedicated on March 5, 1980 and is roughly bounded by Railroad Ave., and Henderson, Grand, Bright, and Monmouth Sts. 40°43′7″N 74°2′50″W

The house was one of two similar homes constructed by Cornelius Van Vorst, a founder of the Township of Van Vorst and mayor of Jersey City from 1860 to 1862.[3] The Van Vorsts were a prominent family who trace their North American roots to the third superintendent of the patroonship Pavonia, whose bowery was located at nearby Harsimus. The family lends it name to the nearby Van Vorst Park which was part of the township.

Built between 1835–1837, and also known as the Ionic House, the wooden Greek Revival structure has five Ionic columns gracing a two-story portico. The columns divide the building into four equal bays, effecting an offset center hall. As the columns are evenly spaced, the front door is not in the center, but set off to the right The interior of late Federal-early Greek Revival style with some Victorian décor features a ballroom, carved Italian marble fireplaces and twelve-foot ceilings.

The mansion stood alongside the Van Vorst Mansion, separated only by a lawn, and near the Van Vorst family farmhouse. In 1874 Van Vorst sold his home to Dr. Benjamin Edge and it was later demolished in the 1920s.

The Y.M.C.A. bought the Barrow Mansion in the 1890s, adding a rifle range and gymasium. St. Matthew's Evangelical Lutheran Church purchased the residence in 1897 and used it as a parish house. The pistol range was converted to a two-lane bowling alley in the basement. The following year St. Matthew's Church was built on the lawn between the Barrow and Van Vorst mansions. The church flourished until the 1920s and the former mansion and parish house became a lively and popular social center.

As the neighborhood changed in the post-war era, the mansion fell into disrepair. In 1984 the Barrow Mansion Development Corporation was founded to renovate the mansion and operate it as a center for community service. The BMDC's board is composed of members from St. Matthew's Lutheran Church and the wider community. The BMDC leases the mansion from church, and received grants in 1992 and 1995 from the New Jersey Historic Trust and other grantors for building restoration. The mansion currently provides office space to small businesses and non-profits, is home to the Attic Ensemble theater company,[4] Jersey City Children's Theater and is host to Hudson County's largest number of Twelve Step groups and other community meetings (over 1100 in 2010).

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