It did
not take many years for the
English who settled at Jamestown
in 1607 to discover that one path
to the wealth they craved was
tobacco. To that end they began
spreading out, establishing
plantations to grow the golden
weed. One of the earliest of these
plantations was Shirley;
the name first appeared on records
in 1611, although it would be two
more years before the estate was
inhabited.
For three centuries and ten
generations Shirley has been held
by the Hill-Carter family. Though
the intricate family tree dates
back to 1660, the house was not
built until 1724 when Edward Hill
III began constructing it for his
daughter Elizabeth and her husband
John Carter, son of Robert "King"
Carter. Architectural historians
trace the inspiration for this
square-shaped home to the
Governor's Palace in nearby
Williamsburg. Rather than the
Georgian hyphen and wings design,
Shirley has a basement and three
stories. Like the numerous
dependencies, the brick house is
built in the Flemish bond
pattern. On the roof is a carved
pineapple, symbol of hospitality.
Shirley is noted for its
hospitality---to horses as well as
presidents. The family silver has
been used to serve George
Washington, Thomas Jefferson, John
Tyler and Theodore Roosevelt. Not
one of the presidents, however,
had his own silver cup like
Nestor, the family's champion
racehorse. After a victorious
race Nestor was offered wine from
his cup, reversing the practice of
offering the loving cup to the
owner.
Family lore abounds at Shirley.
One story that is told and retold
concerns the frieze over the
fireplace in the dining room. It
may have been told one too many
times. One of the current younger
generation at Shirley, after
hearing repeatedly about an
earlier Carter youngster who
whittled all but four acorns out
of the carved frieze, decided to
make his own mark and eliminated
all but one before his mother
stopped him in mid-crime.
Fortunately the frieze is not the
carved work for which Shirley is
noted. That honor belongs to the
hanging staircase. This square,
not curved, staircase rises
without visible means of support,
and each tread is gracefully
scrolled.
The parlor at Shirley is
historically, rather than
architecturally, significant. It
was here that Anne Hill Carter
married Governor Henry "Lighthorse
Harry" Lee. Their son, Robert,
would spend several boyhood years
at Shirley. History also marked
this plantation during America's
early struggles. Like so many of
the James River plantations,
Shirley had troops on her soil
during both the Revolutionary War
and the War Between the States.
Shirley is still a working
plantation producing corn, barley,
wheat and soy beans. The grounds
have a full complement of
dependencies---a large two-story
kitchen, smokehouse, dovecote,
stable and barns. You can visit
Shirley daily except Christmas Day
from 9:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.
Admission is charged.
At nearby Edgewood, just
three miles from Shirley, the
family tree is likely to be one of
the 18 decorated Christmas trees
that fill this Carpenter's Gothic
house from October well into
January. Here the ambience is not
Revolutionary or antebellum but
Victorian, a delightful change of
pace.
The house was built in 1849 by
Spencer Rowland, a New Jerseyite
who fell in love with the South.
His daughter, Lizzie, likewise
fell in love with the South, or at
least a young Southerner from a
nearby plantation, perhaps even
Shirley. Lizzie was in her
mid-twenties when she moved to
Edgewood and lost her heart. Then
she lost him to the Civil War.
Her ghost is said to haunt the
bedroom where she died and her
name is etched on the window
through which the apparition
peers, forever searching for her
handsome beau on his spirited
horse.
Dot
and John Boulware purchased this
house in 1978. They have repaired
and refurbished the 14 large rooms
that evolved into a bed and
breakfast. Dot offers Victorian
teas and luncheons and if you call
ahead she wears a Victorian dress
for the house tour. The bedrooms
are a treasure trove of Victoriana,
with old-fashioned clothes laid out
casually to enhance the decor. One
overnight guest mistook the decor
for a gesture and wore the antique
nightshirt to bed.
You
can visit Edgewood daily from 11:30
A.M. to 4:00 P.M. To pre-arrange
visits, teas, luncheons or
accommodations call (804) 829-2962.
Directions:
From I-295 east of Richmond, take
Route 5 for about 25 miles to
Shirley Plantation on the right and
Edgewood on the left.
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