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ANTIQUES.(Brief Article)

The Magazine Antiques

| January 01, 2001 | COPYRIGHT 2001 Brant Publications, Inc. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

They live in the same neat manner, dress after the same modes, and behave themselves exactly as the gentry in London, most families of any note having a coach, chariot, berlin or chaise.... The habits, life, customs, computations &c of the Virginians are much the same as about London, which they esteem their home.

Hugh Jones, The Present State of Virginia, 1724

Virginia was the site of the first of the English settlements in British North America and by the time of the American Revolution, the largest, most populous, and most valuable of the colonies. When the planter elite attempted to duplicate the way of life and accommodations of the English gentleman they brought a genre representative of the golden age on both sides of the Atlantic--the country house--nearer to perfection than anywhere outside England. Predictably, the very different physical and social conditions in the new world governed their settlements. Early Virginians were quick to adapt new materials and resources for their buildings and to alter traditional forms "to fit the circumstances of our country," as Robert "King" Carter wrote about 1720. At the same time, they looked to English art and architecture as means to overcome their provincial status.

As Hugh Jones noted, many wealthy Virginians perceived themselves to be Londoners and tried to match an extravagant architectural tradition in the wilderness. Jones declared that the buildings in Williamsburg "are justly reputed the best in all the English America, and are exceeded by few of their kind in England." At one end of the town stood "the Capitol, a noble, beautiful, and commodious pile." At the other was the college "beautiful and commodious, being first modelled by Sir Christopher Wren [and] adapted to the nature of the country." However, by early in the twentieth century, the colonial capital had fallen into sad decay.

William A. R. Goodwin, the rector of Bruton Parish Church (1715) in Williamsburg early in the twentieth century, supervised its restoration. When the project was completed in 1907 he published Bruton Parish Church Restored and Its Historic Environment in which he called Williamsburg and its environs "the Cradle of the Republic," and pleaded for the retention of the intangible quality he called the "spirit of the past." This romantic dreamer intended that the whole lower peninsula of Virginia be recognized as the birthplace of the United States, with Williamsburg the focal point.

At a banquet held in New York City in February 1924 Goodwin met John D. Rockefeller Jr., who had the ...

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