I have an advance copy of the book and it's gorgeous! I thought you'd like to get a sneak peak so attached is a copy of the Hearthside chapter. There are other photos though spread throughout the book in addition to this so we really have a large presence in it, along with the White House, Monticello, Mt. Vernon, Colonial Williamsburg, and Blithewold. There are lots of great decorating ideas in it! We feel very proud of Hearthside's inclusion in it, but especially for the volunteers, the friends of Hearthside, the decorators, who have make it happen!
OUR PAGES:
Lincoln, Rhode Island
Christmas By The Hearth
W here could one sit beside a cozy fire on Christmas Day and be warmed by flames and flute-like music, both
emanating from the fireplace? Perhaps only one place in the world—Hearthside Homestead in Lincoln, Rhode Island.
“The draft of the fire causes the wind-driven Pandean Pipes,an extraordinary musical instrument built into the fireplace chimney, to produce clear musical notes,” says Kathy Hartley,founder and president of Friends of Hearthside. “Such instruments have been found in castle ruins in Europe, but it would be rare, perhaps impossible, to find them installed in a house anywhere other than at Hearthside Homestead.”
Why were the Pandean Pipes installed in the Hearthside parlor chimney? “Installing this unique musical instrument may have been just one more attempt by Stephen Smith, who built this house for his lady love, to give her the most wonderful house in the nation. To woo her with music, and live happily ever after with her at Hearthside,” she says. Alas, happily ever after was not to be. Kathy tells the story:
In 1810, Stephen Hopkins Smith of Smithfield, Rhode Island (which became Lincoln in 1871) set his heart on
marrying the daughter of a prominent Providence family.
She told him she had her heart set on ‘marrying well’ and ‘expected to live in the grandest house around.’
When Smith (affluent but not wealthy) won $40,000 in a lottery, he kept his windfall a secret and prompted by love, began building a grand house. As the story goes, one Sunday afternoon Smith took his buggy to Providence and invited the young woman to take a drive with him. They set out at a leisurely pace, eventually turning onto Great Road. As the crossed the bridge over the Moshassuck River, Hearthside came into view. ‘Oh what a beautiful house!’ she exclaimed. Smith’s hopes soared. Then she added, ’But, I could never live so far out in the wilderness!’ Smith turned the buggy around, returned to Providence, and never courted her again. He settled in a house down the street, and built a business (the Butterfly Mill, now the Butterfly House) across from Hearthside.
This sad story of love and rejection was cited in Ripley’s Believe It or Not, which referred to Hearthside as
The Heartbreak House.
Andrew and Penelope Mowbray and their three children, young Andrew (Drew), Sherry and Stuart. Theirs is a much happier version of Smith’s story. One day, Andrew drove Penelope past Hearthside. ‘Oh,’ she said, ‘What a beautiful house! And look it’s even for sale!’ Hearthside was home to the Mowbrays for 40 years.
The senior Andrew died in 1996, and Mrs. Mowbray sold the property to the Town of Lincoln. Now, under the stewardship of Friends of Hearthside, Hearthside is truly The House That Love Built.
The Mowbray’s love for the Christmas season continues at Hearthside today in special holiday events, beginning with the early December Candlelight Christmas Tour. Candles in the window guide guests to a hospitable house beautifully decorated by volunteers to evoke memories of Christmases past. “In keeping
with the candle-in-the-window to welcome travelers tradition,” says Kathy, “there is no admission fee. Instead, guests donate non-perishable food to the Rhode Island Community Food Bank.” Guides dressed in Victorian finery greet guests who stroll through elegant rooms, while a harpist plays seasonal music.
Drew Mowbray, eldest of the three Mowbray children and now residing in Germany, recalls to Kathy fond Christmas memories of his childhood years (1950s-1970s) at Hearthside.
The tree used to be put up in the parlor (the room with the Pipes of Pan).
One year, the Christmas tree was to the right of the fireplace, but most often it was placed in the corner next to the door going out to the front hall. We children were shoohed upstairs on Christmas Eve, but if someone forgot to close the door to the parlor below, and we lay down on the floor and peered through the banister we could sort of see a bit of the tree.We put out cookies and milk in the front hall or the kitchen for Santa. For a number of years, my father took the time and made his own Christmas cards, painted on canvas, and then printed up the cards at his business,Mowbray Printing Company. One of my favorites was
the one with Santa flying over the houses on Great Road.and Hearthside was shown in a “cut-away” view so you could see all the family inside—adults trimming the tree
and we kids sleeping upstairs.
My father fed an interest in collecting by giving me so many neat buttons or buckles from the Civil War that he had found during the year. I looked forward to these antiques and still have all of them. One year, I received a young boy’s Civil War uniform jacket, which I also still have.
Friends’ Christmas cards were hung on a cord across the fireplace mantle, and there were always electric candles put in the windows to make the house look so nice. It seemed that the snow was always very deep. We could slide from the little hill in the field behind the house all the way to the back steps.
In the 1960s, all our friends would turn up at the house, so it was full of long-haired teens. Good memories to say the least. We always had turkey. And eggnog—with something forbidden in it. The house was alive.
Sherry Mowbray remembers her father painting the scenes for the Christmas cards when she was a young girl in the early 1960s,” says Kathy. “She also fondly recalls how lovely the white candle-style lights in each window looked from the outside especially when there was snow on the ground; how it helped set the mood inside. Sherry liked to go around to each room and turn the candle bulbs on.
“Sherry told me, ’Our tradition was to cut our own Christmas tree—always getting one just a bit too big, even though the ceilings at Hearthside were quite high.’ Her favorite part of Christmas dinner was her mother’s apple pie,” says Kathy.
Dinner Menu for
Large Turkey with Homemade Stuffing
Gravy
Creamed Potatoes-and-Onions
Yellow Squash
White Turnips
Tiny Peas
Old-Fashioned Bread and Butter Pickles
Large Pitted Black Olives
Small Green Olives
Cranberry Sauce
Candlight, lace, and a wreath dress up a Dining Room window with its handsome wooden shutters folded into the deep reveal of the 14-inch thick exterior cut-stone wall.
Wainscoting and the mantel in the Dining Room are made from old window shutters that were installed during the 1920s. The metallic gold of chargers and the russet colored cloth at table, and topiaries on the sideboard add holiday glamour.
Mowbray Every-Christmas
Apple Cider
Eggnog
Tea in the Pot
Homemade Pumpkin Pie
Homemade Apple Pie &; Extra Sharp Cheese
The House
Hearthside—built of fieldstone and trimmed with granite quarried from a ledge across the street from the house—is considered one of the finest examples of Federal architecture in Rhode Island. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. A replica of Hearthside was displayed in the Rhode Island Pavilion at the 1904 World’s Fair in St. Louis.
In 1905, the Talbot family named the house Hearthside because of its ten fireplaces. They named their handweaving business conducted there “Hearthside Looms,” and Hearthside became known throughout the country for the quality of the goods woven there. Hearthside has captured the hearts of those who maintain it as an important historic house museum and a vital link to Lincoln’s past, present and future. It welcomes all—especially at Christmastime.
The Gazebo, an anniversary gift from Andrew Mowbray to his wife, Penelope,
becomes winter garden sculpture when silhouetted against new-fallen snow.
cards are hung as ornaments on Christmas
trees in the Master Bedroom.
Kathy Chase Hartley, neighbor and childhood friend of the Mowbray children, recalls receiving original Mowbray Christmas cards.
Now these charming cards are reproduced for sale in the Hearthside Homestead Gift Shop.
I can still remember the excitement and anticipation I had as a little girl in the 1960s experiencing all the traditions of the Christmas season in my own home. To me, what was almost as exciting as counting down the days until Christmas by opening the little door on the Advent Calendar each day, was the trip down our long driveway to the mailbox with my mother. We would return home, sit down and open each envelope and look
at the holiday cards...pictures of Christmas trees, wreaths, Santa Claus, and latest photos of families and relatives…pretty typical holiday cards. But it was the Christmas card from the Mowbray
family that I would most eagerly await each year.
The Mowbray family card was so special. It was as though the card was made just for us! After all, it was a card with scenes from my own street, Great Road! Each year, the card was so different, receiving it was just like the surprise of opening a present. While all the other cards were set aside in a neat pile, the Mowbray card was given a special spot for display in our house, becoming part of the decorations of the season. Some
50 years later, we still have the cards!
The cards were the creation of Andrew Mowbray, who designed and painted each one as an oil painting on canvas and then had prints of them made into cards. He kept his paintings a secret.
Not even his family knew what the subject of the painting would be each year until it was completed and
he unveiled it to them.
My all time favorite card was the View of Hearthside. The cutaway view was like peering into a dollhouse—except this one was a real house, just around the corner from my house! And there was Santa Claus flying right overhead, probably right before he would visit me. I could see my friends in the card, Drew and Sherry
Mowbray tucked away in their beds upstairs. Their father was downstairs decorating the Christmas tree in the parlor, and their mother in the kitchen taking something out of the oven... maybe it was apple pie! There was even a cat in the house. I studied that card for hours it seemed. Hearthside always held a special mystique for me. This card was mesmerizing with this cozy scene. You could get lost in it, imagining yourself being
a part of that wonderful home on Christmas Eve. I remember the Skaters on Butterfly Pond, the pond across the street from my house! There were men, women and children dressed in old-fashioned clothes skating on the pond and looking so very elegant. I skated on that pond too, but their clothes were far different from my corduroy pants and ski parka. The women wore long skirts, hooded capes and fur muffs, and the men wore
fancy jackets and top hats. Even the kids looked dressed up in their Sunday best to skate in! Looking closely at the card, it was no wonder…the date is 1814. It is probably the way Christmas might have looked when the first family lived at Hearthside. I also liked the Great Road Christmas 1812 card, because it also had so many other houses and buildings along Great Road besides Hearthside. It was fun to look at it and guess whose house was where on the road, and whose house had not yet been built. It was yet another card to let your imagination take you along the journey up Great Road during the olden days, and bring you to stop at Hearthside to get warm by the fires inside. I never noticed until now that there was a mistake on the card. It
was in the Great Road sign where the “r” was mistakenly left out of “Christmas.” The discovery of it was
devastating to Andrew. From that point on, he quit the family tradition of having custom painted Christmas
cards, so the Great Road Christmas card was the end of an era. For me, waiting for Christmas to come never seemed quite the same again.
Hearthside’s Mowbray Christmas Cards Reproductions of these original Christmas cards by Andrew Mowbray are now available in the Hearthside Manor Gift Shop.
No comments:
Post a Comment