Old Philadelphia Houses on Society Hill, 17501840
By (Author) Elizabeth B. McCall
Photographs by Michael Maicher
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
12th September 2014
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
History of architecture
728.0974811
Paperback
192
Width 215mm, Height 276mm, Spine 12mm
558g
Officially known as Washington Square Park, Philadelphias Society Hill district contains an impressive number of eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century housesperhaps as many as any other comparable area in the United States. This book presents, in text and pictures, the stories of its outstanding Colonial and Early American mansions and dwellings and simple row houses; its churches and other exceptional historic buildings. Old Philadelphia Houses on Society Hill contains both notes and illustrations on the design and architectural details of early Philadelphia row houses. There are also enlightening chapters devoted to such famous places as Bells Court, the Drinker House and Drinkers Court, the Head House and Old Market, the Hill-Physick-Keith House and the Latta House, Old Pine Street Church and the Pennsylvania Hospital, the Man Full of Trouble Inn and many others, all complemented by photos. Featured are the uses of brick and the traditional design and decoration of the periods interiors, showing antique furniture and prevailing modes of interior decoration. The 150 photographs strike a nice balance of exteriors and interiors, showing characteristic basics and details of structure and charming furniture pieces and accessories of old-time daily living. Tidbits of information concerning such personages as George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, Dr. Benjamin Rush and other eminent Americans are scattered throughout the book.
Elizabeth B. McCall, a lifelong resident of Philadelphias Chestnut Hill, has worked on newspapers all her adult life. She has been a regular contributor to the Philadelphia Bulletin, and a columnist for the Chestnut Hill Local. She is a member of many Pennsylvania societies, including the National Society of Colonial Dames, Pennsylvania, and the Society of Mayflower Descendants.