Grey Towers Castle

Grey Towers Castle

Infobox_nrhp | name =Grey Towers
nrhp_type = nhl


caption = Grey Towers
location= Glenside, Pennsylvania
lat_degrees = 40
lat_minutes = 4
lat_seconds = 53
lat_direction = N
long_degrees = 75
long_minutes = 9
long_seconds = 54
long_direction = W
locmapin = Pennsylvania
area =
built =1893
architect= Trumbauer,Horace
architecture= Other
designated= February 4 1985cite web|url=http://tps.cr.nps.gov/nhl/detail.cfm?ResourceId=1833&ResourceType=Building |title= Grey Towers |accessdate=2008-07-02|work=National Historic Landmark summary listing|publisher=National Park Service]
added = February 14, 1980
governing_body = Private
refnum=80003578cite web|url=http://www.nr.nps.gov/|title=National Register Information System|date=2007-01-23|work=National Register of Historic Places|publisher=National Park Service]

Grey Towers Castle is a building on the campus of Arcadia University in Glenside, Pennsylvania, a suburb of Philadelphia. The castle was designed by Horace Trumbauer and built starting in 1893 as the estate of William Welsh Harrison. The university (then known as Beaver College and located in nearby Jenkintown) purchased the estate in 1929 for $712,500. [ [http://www.arcadia.edu/prospective/default.aspx?id=579 Grey Towers Castle at Arcadia.edu] ] Classes were split between the two locations until 1962, when the school moved all of its operations to the Glenside area. The castle is a registered National Historic Landmark.

History

William Welsh Harrison, co-owner of the Franklin Sugar Refinery, purchased in 1881, Rosedale Hall from J. Thomas Audenreid. By 1891 Mr. Harrison had expanded his estate to 138 acres, and decided to expand the house and provide a gate house and more adequate stables. He employed the skills of 23-year-old architect Horace Trumbauer. Trumbauer completed the stables and gate house in 1892.

In 1893, the main house of Rosedale Hall was burned to the ground in a raging fire, during which the Harrison family fled to the stables for safety. Afterwards, the family moved into a house in Glenside proper, while Trumbauer was again employed to build a new home on the site of the destroyed Rosedale Hall. By March 1893, Trumbauer presented Mr. Harrison with plans for a grandiose mansion, inspired by Alnwick Castle, the medieval seat of the Dukes of Northumberland. The new house however, would include all the most modern conveniences of the time, and the cost was estimated at $250,000. Work was underway by the end of 1893.

Design

Grey Towers Castle is designed in a highly eclectic yet elegant fashion, taking inspiration from a variety of styles, periods, and buildings. The house is built of grey stone quarried at nearby Chestnut Hill, and Indiana limestone is used for exterior door and window trim, and other elements, such as the various gargoyles.

The interiors of the castle reflect various French styles ranging from Renaissance through Louis XV. The massive twin mantles in the Great Hall are interpretations of a Renaissance mantle in the Salle des Gardes, in the François I wing of Château de Blois. The Library, now the President's office, and the Dining room, both on the south side of the Great Hall, contain many elements reminiscent of French Renaissance decoration. The walnut cabinetry and plaster friezes in the Library and the and columns and caraytids and strapwork ceiling in the Dining room are inspired by interiors of the Château de Fontainebleau. On the north side of the Great Hall lay the Mirror Room and the Drawing Room, now known as the Rose Room. It is thought that the entirety of the Mirror Room was ordered at the New York office of a French firm, then crafted in France and shipped to Glenside, along with workers, to be installed. The ceiling was painted by François Lafon, and depicts the four seasons as women, accompanied by cupids, with the path of the Zodiac behind them.

In the Great Hall, which rises three stories to a grand barrel vaulted and gilded ceiling, the Grand Staircase leads to a large landing, which contains the Music Room. The ceiling was originally painted in a Renaissance style, but all that remains is the painting in the spaces of the archway, through which the room is accessed. Above the wainscoting of the Music Room, large tapestries depict Euterpe, the Muse of Music. All the tapestries in Grey Towers were provided by William Baumgarten and Co., Inc. of New York City. On each floor there is a balcony which rings the Great Hall, and tapestries line all of these spaces.

Upon completion, Grey Towers was one of the largest homes in the country, with forty rooms. The eclectic and grandiose style attracted attention to the young Horace Trumbauer, who began a successful career, which included the construction of the Philadelphia Museum of Art and many other houses and buildings in the Philadelphia area.

Current use

William Welsh Harrison died in 1927, and in 1929 Beaver College (now Arcadia University), then located in Jenkintown, purchased the estate from his widow for $712,500. Classes were split between the two locations until 1962, when the college moved permanently to the Grey Towers property. The castle currently houses the Offices of Admissions, Enrollment Management, and Financial Aid, and the office of the president. The vast bedrooms on the third floor are used as housing for students.

The castle, designated a National Historic Landmark in 1985, is much-loved by the students and staff of the University. There are many stories and myths surrounding the building and the Harrison family. According to legend, Mr. Harrison and his wife did not get along well, and eventually each lived in his own side of the house. Mr. Harrison was thought to have had relations with many different female servants. A popular story among students is that Mrs. Harrison, upon discovering that her husband was having an affair, took the servant into a room in one of the towers (one of the many sealed off and restricted) and beat her to death. To this day her blood stains cannot be removed from the floor. In one of the third-floor bedrooms, a mirror above the fireplace mantle had to be replaced because of a large crack. Yet, every time it is replaced it cracks soon after.

The castle is also rumored to have been built entirely without the use of nails, and there are apparently many secret passages behind the fireplaces, that Mr. Harrison used to conduct his affairs. In addition, there is a series of underground tunnels connecting the main house to the stables and other outbuildings.

References


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