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Fatland, also known as Fatland Farm, Fatland Ford and Vaux Hill, is a Greek Revival mansion and estate in
Audubon, Pennsylvania Audubon is a census-designated place (CDP) in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, United States. It was named for naturalist John James Audubon, who lived there as a young man. The population was 8,433 at the 2010 census. Geography Audubon is loc ...
. Located on the north side of the Schuylkill River, opposite Valley Forge, the property was part of the Continental Army's 1777-78 winter encampment. On consecutive days in September 1777, its stone farmhouse served as headquarters for General
George Washington George Washington (February 22, 1732, 1799) was an American military officer, statesman, and Founding Father who served as the first president of the United States from 1789 to 1797. Appointed by the Continental Congress as commander of th ...
and British General Sir William Howe. The farmhouse was demolished about 1843, and the mansion was completed on its site about 1845. The Wetherill Family owned the property for 121 years—1825 to 1946. A private cemetery contains the graves of some of Fatland's owners, and of
Free Quakers The Religious Society of Free Quakers, originally called "The Religious Society of Friends, by some styled the Free Quakers," was established on February 20, 1781 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. More commonly known as Free Quakers, the Society was ...
who supported the Revolutionary War.


Fatland Farm

The Perkiomen Creek empties in to the Schuylkill River just north of Valley Forge. The river curves in an oxbow and forms a peninsula with the creek. Early settlers called the area the "Fatlands of Egypt" because of its frequent flooding and rich alluvial soil. James Morgan dammed the creek and built a grist mill and miller's house on the north side of the Perkiomen Peninsula in 1749. He built the country seat "Mill Grove" in 1762. In a February 28, 1771 advertisement in ''The Pennsylvania Gazette'', he announced the upcoming auction of two adjacent properties, Fatland Farm and Mill Grove Farm:
To be sold at public venue on the 4th day of March, upon the premises, if not sold before at private sale, by the subscriber, in Providence township, Philadelphia county, two valuable plantations, one of which consisting of 300 acres (Fatland farm), bounding near a mile on the Schuylkill river, whereas a good shad fishery; it also bounds the lands of Henry Pawling, Esq., and extends along the same to the Perkiomen; there are about 150 acres cleared, 20 whereof are good watered meadow and a great quantity more may be made; the woodland well timbered and the whole well watered, with the conveniency of watering every field on the plantation; there is a good stone dwelling house, brew house, with a large frame barn, three good bearing apple orchards, with a large peach orchard bearing plentifully. The other contains 250 acres ill Grove Farm..."Dr. W. H. Reed, "Audubon. Its History, Tradition and Reminiscences," ''Historical Sketches: A Collection of Papers Prepared for the Historical Society of Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, Volume 4'', (Montgomery County Historical Society, 1909), pp. 173-224.
This auction took place, but neither property sold. Instead, James Vaux (1748–1842) purchased Fatland Farm by private sale more than a year later, on June 18, 1772.


Vaux Hill

Vaux renamed the property "Vaux Hill." The 300-acre (121.4 hectares) farm spanned the middle of the peninsula.Abstract - Vaux Family Papers
from Historical Society of Pennsylvania.
Part of its western boundary, shared with Henry Pawling's farm, was the road south to Fatland Ford, a shallow crossing of the Schuylkill River, opposite Valley Forge.National Park Service, ''Cultural Landscapes Inventory—Valley Forge National Historical Park'', 199
(PDF)
/ref> Vaux was an English farmer and
Quaker Quakers are people who belong to a historically Protestant Christian set of Christian denomination, denominations known formally as the Religious Society of Friends. Members of these movements ("theFriends") are generally united by a belie ...
, who emigrated to Pennsylvania in 1771.''Journal of the Friends' Historical Society, Volume 6'', (London: Friends' Historical Society, 1909), p. 18

/ref> He expanded the existing stone farmhouse in 1776, and constructed its stone barn. The following year he married Susanna Warder (1749–1812) of Philadelphia, also a Quaker. Vaux took no side in the American Revolutionary War, Revolutionary War. On September 21, 1777, General
George Washington George Washington (February 22, 1732, 1799) was an American military officer, statesman, and Founding Father who served as the first president of the United States from 1789 to 1797. Appointed by the Continental Congress as commander of th ...
, accompanied by a detachment of his life guard and aide-de-camp
Tench Tilghman Tench Tilghman (, December 25, 1744April 18, 1786) was an officer in the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War. He served as an aide-de-camp to General George Washington, achieving the rank of lieutenant colonel. Tilghman rose ...
, surveilled British troops at Valley Forge from the north side of the river. The river was swollen, which prevented the British from crossing. At Washington's direction, his aide urgently wrote to General Alexander McDougall—"... the River has fallen and is fordable at almost any place, the Enemy can have no Reason to delay passing much longer. He would have wrote you personally, but is employed in viewing the ground and making disposition of the Army which arrived yesterday." Vaux invited Washington to dine and stay the night—the life guard secured Fatland Ford overnight. Washington and his troops departed early the following morning. That same morning, British Captain John Montroser recorded in his journal: " eptember22nd. — At 5 this morning ... the Light Infantry and Grenadiers passed over the Schuylkill at Fatland Ford without a single shot and took post." Early that evening, General Howe crossed the ford and made Vaux Hill his headquarters. Vaux dined with Howe, who asked about the rebel officer who had been spotted the previous day. When informed that it had been Washington himself, Howe reportedly replied: "Oh, I wish I had known that. I would have tried to catch him!" The opposing commanders-in-chief probably slept in the same bed on consecutive nights.Harold Donaldson Eberlein and Horace Mather Lippincott, ''Colonial Homes of Philadelphia and Its Neighbourhood'', (Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott Company, 1912). As Howe slept, the British Army began a night crossing from Valley Forge. Montroser: " eptember23rd. — Just after 12 o'clock this night the whole army moved to the opposite side, on the north side of the river Schuylkill by the way of Fatland Ford, and by 10 a. m. the whole baggage and all had happily passed it. After the principal body had got on the north side of the Schuylkill about one mile the army halted to dry themselves and rest." General Washington and the Continental Army returned to the area in December 1777, and began the six month Valley Forge encampment. Most of the troops were quartered south of the river, but Vaux's farm was the site of troop encampments and support facilities. General John Sullivan supervised construction of a floating-log bridge slightly downstream from Fatland Ford. This bridge provided a river crossing in times of high water, and an escape route should British attack from the south. The floating bridge was destroyed by ice in 1779.
The British army, in September, 1777, passed from Valley Forge to the left bank of the Schuylkill by the Fatland Ford; not many months later une 19, 1778 when the American forces evacuated Valley Forge, they crossed at the same place, as just mentioned. Both armies swarmed over the Vaux Hill plantation like devastating clouds of locusts. Tearing down fences, destroying trees and doing thousands of pounds' worth of damage in various ways, they wrought such havoc that Mr. Vaux's estate was seriously embarrassed in consequence.
The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania paid Vaux £1,000 in compensation for damage done to his property during the war. "In the 1785 assessment of Providence township, James Vaux is recorded as a farmer, owning a farm of 300 acres of land, dwelling, four horses, six cows, one servant (colored), and one riding chair." He later served in the
Pennsylvania Legislature The Pennsylvania General Assembly is the legislature of the U.S. commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The legislature convenes in the State Capitol building in Harrisburg. In colonial times (1682–1776), the legislature was known as the Pennsylvani ...
. Vaux sold Vaux Hill to John Echline Allen, about 1794. There are no known images of the "good stone dwelling house" described in 1771, or of the house as expanded by Vaux.Harold Donaldson Eberlein, ''Portrait of a Colonial City: Philadelphia 1670–1838'', (Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott Company, 1939).


Fatland Ford

By 1803, the farm was owned by James S. Ewing, who advertised it for sale in September. He listed its buildings: "... a dwelling-house 45x35 feet, built of stone, ... Smith's house and Shop, Ice house, spring house, poultry house, smoke house, large stone barn with stables for 40 head of horses and cows ..." Ewing sold the property to Englishman William Woodhouse Bakewell (1759–1821) who, with his wife, 4 daughters and 2 sons, occupied it in January 1804. Bakewell's wife, Lucy Green Bakewell (1765–1804), died during their first year living there. Their eldest daughter, also named Lucy (1787–1874), took on the duties of hostess. Bakewell renamed the property "Fatland Ford," and operated it as a gentleman's farm. Robert Sutcliff, a relative of Bakewell's estate manager, visited in August 1804:
This plantation, consists of 300 acres of good land, 200 of which are cleared, and 100 covered with wood. On the estate is a well finished square stone house, about 15 yards 3.7 min length, with a wide boarded floor piazza, both in back and front. These afford excellent accommodation during the summer season ... Besides the dwelling house, there is an excellent kitchen, and offices adjoining; with a large barn, and stables sufficient to accommodate 40 horses and cows; all well built of stone. The estate extends the whole breadth betwixt the Schuylkill and Perkiomen. On the former river there is a


Audubon

Sutcliff also visited
Mill Grove, then owned by Jean Audubon, a retired French sea captain living in Nantes, France.Stanley Clisby Arthur, ''Audubon: An Intimate Life of the American Woodsman'', (Gretna, Louisiana: Pelican Publishing, 1937). Lead deposits had been discovered on the farm, and Captain Audubon formed a partnership with French businessman Francis Dacosta to mine the ore. Sutcliff wrote: "In the plantation adjoining to my relation's, we visited a lead mine on the banks of the Perkiomin , which was then worked by a Frenchman. He invited us to go down into it, where, at the depth of about 12 feet, I saw a vein of lead ore 18 inches in thickness; and as it is wrought at a very easy expense, there was a great probability of its being a very valuable acquisition." The "Frenchman" Sutcliff met may have been Dacosta, or it may have been the captain's 19-year-old son (and future naturalist)
John James Audubon John James Audubon (born Jean-Jacques Rabin; April 26, 1785 – January 27, 1851) was an American self-trained artist, naturalist, and ornithologist. His combined interests in art and ornithology turned into a plan to make a complete pictoria ...
—they had arrived in America together the year before. Audubon and 17-year-old Lucy Bakewell fell in love, although her father thought both of them too young to marry. Informed by letter of his son's intentions, Captain Audubon initially opposed the marriage. With money borrowed from the Bakewells, Audubon sailed for France in January 1805 to sort out what to do about Mill Grove and the lead mine, and to obtain his father's permission to marry. He returned to the United States in May 1806 having attained his majority and his father's blessing. Bakewell also consented to the engagement. Audubon sold Mill Grove and his father's interest in the lead mine to Dacosta in September 1806, and moved to New York City to work as a clerk in the counting house of Bakewell's brother. In August 1807, he and a partner opened a pioneer store in Louisville, Kentucky. On April 8, 1808, John James Audubon and Lucy Bakewell were married at "Fatland Ford."John James Audubon, ''Audubon and His Journals'', edited by Maria R. Audubon, (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1899). The next morning, the newlyweds departed for Louisville, where Audubon continued his short-lived career as a merchant. When Bakewell advertised Fatland Ford for sale in 1813, he listed "a teamthreshing-mill, which threshes 12 bushels of barley in an hour," and livestock of "200 Sheep of the English Morena breeds, span of oxen and other cattle, 4 asses, 7 horses, ... 30 pigs of the English Berkshire breed." The sale was not successful; Bakewell was still the owner of the property when he died there in 1821.Henry Woodman, ''The History of Valley Forge'', (Oaks, PA: John U. Francis, Sr., 1922) Lucy Green Bakewell had been buried at "Fatland Ford" in 1804. Bakewell remarried, and was initially buried in Philadelphia. His descendants later had him reinterred beside his first wife.


Fatland

Dacosta's lead mine initially was unprofitable, with costs too great to compete with imported lead from England.Francis Hobart Herrick, ''Audubon the Naturalist: A History of His Life and Time, Volume 1'', (New York and London: D. Appleton and Company, 1917). The War of 1812 caused imports to be cut off, and the price of lead in the United States to soar.''The First Century of the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, 1821-1921'', (Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and Science, 1922). Samuel Wetherill, Jr., a Philadelphia white lead importer and paint manufacturer, purchased Mill Grove for $7,000 in 1813. Wetherill & Son reopened the mine, and "mined and smelted over 100 tons from small veins on Perkiomen Creek in Montgomery County, Pa., on Mill Grove farm." The depleted mine was closed again in the 1820s. Samuel Wetherill 3rd (1764–1829) purchased "Fatland Ford" in 1825, and changed its name to just "Fatland." He had been his father's partner, and inherited the family business. He and his wife, Rachel Price (1766–1844), had 5 sons and a daughter. Wetherill inherited Mill Grove, bought up farms owned by the Bakewells and the Pawlings, and became the great landowner of the peninsula. He subsequently bequeathed the properties to his children and grandchildren. "These properties were improved with stately mansions and outbuildings with beautiful lawns and surroundings. (Also erected were summer residences on some of the properties.)" Dr. William Wetherill (1804–1872), inherited Fatland. He was a Philadelphia physician, and partner – with his brother John, who inherited Mill Grove – in the Wetherill White Lead Works. He and his wife Isabella Macomb (1807–1871) had 16 children, 12 of whom lived to adulthood. Dr. Wetherill demolished Fatland's stone farmhouse, about 1843, and replaced it with a Greek Revival mansion built upon the farmhouse's foundations. Possibly inspired by "Andalusia" (1834–36), Nicholas Biddle's great Greek Revival mansion overlooking the
Delaware River The Delaware River is a major river in the Mid-Atlantic (United States), Mid-Atlantic region of the United States. From the meeting of its branches in Hancock (village), New York, Hancock, New York, the river flows for along the borders of N ...
, architect John Haviland designed a "western counterpart" for Dr. Wetherill, "Fatland Hall," overlooking the Schuylkill River.George E. Thomas, ''Buildings of Pennsylvania – Philadelphia and Eastern Pennsylvania'', (Charlottesville and London: University of Virginia Press, 2010), p. 201. The size and arrangement of the mansion's center hall and formal rooms were similar to James Vaux's expanded farmhouse, but with much higher ceilings: "Fatland is special for the scale of the portico and its juxtaposed miniature service wing." The overall composition was asymmetrical, the first floor of the single wing (to the east) consisted of the formal dining room, and pantries and the family dining room in the end pavilion. The kitchen was in the basement below, and servant rooms were above. The end pavilion featured painted-wood-columned
portico A portico is a porch leading to the entrance of a building, or extended as a colonnade, with a roof structure over a walkway, supported by columns or enclosed by walls. This idea was widely used in ancient Greece and has influenced many cult ...
es on the front and rear facades. The great Ionic columns of the main block's porticoes were of white marble. The mansion was completed about 1845. A stone tablet in its south gable reads: "J. Vaux, 1776; rebuilt by William Wetherill, 1843." "
Bayard Taylor Bayard Taylor (January 11, 1825December 19, 1878) was an American poet, literary critic, translator, travel author, and diplomat. As a poet, he was very popular, with a crowd of more than 4,000 attending a poetry reading once, which was a record ...
, the historian and traveler, claimed he view from the piazzawas the most beautiful view along the beautiful Schuylkill river." Fatland was inherited by Dr. Wetherill's son, Col. John Macomb Wetherill (1828–1895), a Civil War veteran who managed the family's Pennsylvania coal lands, and never married.John Woolf Jordan, ''Colonial Families of Philadelphia, Volume 2'', (Lewis Publishing Company, 1911

/ref> He gave permission for William Bakewell's remains to be reinterred at Fatland, and directed that he himself be buried there. In his will, Col. Wetherill deeded the private cemetery to a trust, directed that it be expanded and improved, and established an endowment for its maintenance. Ownership of Fatland passed to the colonel's younger brother, William H. Wetherill, Jr. (1838–1927) and wife Elizabeth Proctor (1842–1914), under whom the property was "greatly beautified." He carried out the improvements to the private cemetery, and had Wetherill ancestors and others reburied there. Dr. Henry Emerson Wetherill (1871–1946), the eldest son of William H. and a U.S. Army surgeon and inventor, inherited Fatland in 1927. He had been a member of
Robert Peary Robert Edwin Peary Sr. (; May 6, 1856 – February 20, 1920) was an American explorer and officer in the United States Navy who made several expeditions to the Arctic in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He is best known for, in Apri ...
's 1893-94 Greenland expedition, on which he collected plant specimens. He also delivered Mrs. Peary's daughter Marie, whom the popular press dubbed the "Snow Baby." An inveterate tinkerer, his diagnostic medical devices were awarded the 1906 Longstreth Medal by the Franklin Institute. He also invented navigational instruments for ships, and a musical instrument called a trombone flute. Dr. Wetherill never married, and was buried in the private cemetery. He was the last Wetherill to own Fatland.


Free Quaker - Wetherill Cemetery

Samuel Wetherill, Jr. provided supplies to the
Continental Army The Continental Army was the army of the United Colonies (the Thirteen Colonies) in the Revolutionary-era United States. It was formed by the Second Continental Congress after the outbreak of the American Revolutionary War, and was establis ...
at Valley Forge, and was "read out of meeting" (disowned) by the
Society of Friends Quakers are people who belong to a historically Protestant Christian set of denominations known formally as the Religious Society of Friends. Members of these movements ("theFriends") are generally united by a belief in each human's abili ...
in 1779, after refusing to renounce those actions.Charles Wetherill, ''History of The Religious Society of Friends, Called by Some The Free Quakers, in the City of Philadelphia'', (Philadelphia: privately printed, 1894). Defying the pacifism of their religion, "
Free Quakers The Religious Society of Free Quakers, originally called "The Religious Society of Friends, by some styled the Free Quakers," was established on February 20, 1781 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. More commonly known as Free Quakers, the Society was ...
" supported or fought in the Revolutionary War. Wetherill became a founder of Philadelphia's Free Quaker Meeting (chartered February 20, 1781), and served as its clerk and preacher. With brother-in-law Timothy Matlack, another charter member, he designed its
meeting house A meeting house (meetinghouse, meeting-house) is a building where religious and sometimes public meetings take place. Terminology Nonconformist Protestant denominations distinguish between a * church, which is a body of people who believe in Chr ...
(1783–84), at 5th and
Arch Street Arch Street is a major east-west street in Center City Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. History The street was called Mulberry Street in William Penn's original city grid, but it was renamed Arch in 1854. Other parts of the street were once called Hol ...
s.Charles E. Peterson, ''Notes on the Free Quaker Meeting House'', (Washington, D.C.: Ross & Perry, 2002). The meeting established its own burying ground, on the east side of 5th Street between Locust and Spruce Streets.Walter Ault, "The Fighting Quakers Cemetery," ''The Times Herald'', September 14, 200

/ref> Membership dwindled as the Free Quakers died off, and their meeting house was closed in 1836. As the turn of the 20th century approached, the Free Quaker Burying Ground plot became attractive for commercial development. It was in anticipation of its sale that Col. John Macomb Wetherill (Samuel Wetherill, Jr.'s great-grandson) directed in his 1895 will that the private cemetery at Fatland be expanded. In 1905, remains from sixty-one graves were removed from the Free Quaker Burying Ground and reinterred at Fatland. Included were those of Samuel Wetherill, Jr. and his wife and relatives, including
Timothy Matlack Timothy Matlack (March 28, 1736 – April 14, 1829) was an American politician, military officer and businessman. A brewer and beer bottler who emerged as a popular and powerful leader in the American Revolutionary War, Matlack served as Secretar ...
, scribe of the
Second Continental Congress The Second Continental Congress was a late-18th-century meeting of delegates from the Thirteen Colonies that united in support of the American Revolutionary War. The Congress was creating a new country it first named "United Colonies" and in 1 ...
—whose penmanship can be seen in the Declaration of Independence. Many of the tombstones had severely eroded, and were illegible or identifiable only by initials. The remains of Ira Allen, one of Vermont's
Green Mountain Boys The Green Mountain Boys were a militia organization first established in 1770 in the territory between the British provinces of New York and New Hampshire, known as the New Hampshire Grants and later in 1777 as the Vermont Republic (which late ...
, had been lost with the closing of another Philadelphia cemetery, and his cenotaph also was moved to Fatland. Numerous Wetherill family members have been and continue to be buried in the private cemetery.


Saint Gabriel's Hall

On November 19, 1895, the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Philadelphia purchased a 185-acre tract of land adjacent to Fatland, to the west.Joseph Louis J. Kirlin, ''Catholicity in Philadelphia: From the Earliest Missionaries down to the Present Time'', (Philadelphia: J. J. McVey, 1909), pp. 411-1

/ref> Formerly part of Henry Pawling's farm, there the Archdiocese built the Philadelphia Protectory for Boys, an orphanage staffed by the De La Salle Brothers, Christian Brothers. Architects Wilson Brothers & Company designed its Italianate orange-brick-and-red-tile-roofed building, which included a tall
campanile A bell tower is a tower that contains one or more bells, or that is designed to hold bells even if it has none. Such a tower commonly serves as part of a Christian church, and will contain church bells, but there are also many secular bell tower ...
, or belltower. Archbishop Patrick John Ryan dedicated the building on May 8, 1898, with more than 3,000 in attendance. Its initial capacity was for housing 200 boys, but the capacity increased to 500 boys with additions that opened in September 1905. An additional 100 acres were purchased in 1902, which extended the property to the Schuylkill River and included Fatland Island (part of Fatland Ford). The name of the Reading Railroad passenger station opposite the west end of the peninsula was changed to Protectory Station, by 1898. The protectory was renamed Saint Gabriel's Hall in 1962.History
from Saint Gabriel's Hall.
Operated by the Catholic Social Services of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, "St. Gabe's" is now a
juvenile detention In criminal justice systems, a youth detention center, known as a juvenile detention center (JDC),Stahl, Dean, Karen Kerchelich, and Ralph De Sola. ''Abbreviations Dictionary''. CRC Press, 20011202. Retrieved 23 August 2010. , . juvenile det ...
facility. Its border with Fatland follows the old path of Fatland Ford Road.


Camiel

Antiquarian Harold Donaldson Eberlein wrote about Fatland in 1912. By the time he revisited the estate in 1939, the landscape had changed: "So closely is the house screened by great ancient trees that only in winter can you catch a glimpse from a distance of its stately white porticoes gleaming through the interlacing branches." Dr. Henry Emerson Wetherill died at Fatland in 1946. Later that year the property was purchased by the Philadelphia Democratic politician Peter J. Camiel (1910–1991) and his wife Nina (1913–2007). Camiel was one of 12 children of
Polish Polish may refer to: * Anything from or related to Poland, a country in Europe * Polish language * Poles, people from Poland or of Polish descent * Polish chicken *Polish brothers (Mark Polish and Michael Polish, born 1970), American twin screenwr ...
Jewish immigrants, a former boxer, longshoreman and union organizer."Senate Resolution emorializing the late Peter J. Camiel" ''Pennsylvania Legislative Journal—Senate'', February 5, 1991, pp. 116-11
(PDF)
/ref> He made himself a millionaire as a wholesale beer distributor. Camiel served as a Pennsylvania State Senator from 1953 to 1964, and as chairman of the Philadelphia Democratic City Committee from 1970 to 1976."Peter J. Camiel, 81, Philadelphia Chief of '70s Democrats,"
''The New York Times'', February 2, 1991.
He was appointed one of five commissioners to the powerful Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission in 1975, serving on it until his death. State Senator
Vince Fumo Vincent Joseph Fumo (born May 8, 1943) is a former politician, lawyer and businessman from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. A Democrat, he represented a South Philadelphia district in the Pennsylvania Senate from 1978 to 2008. On March 16, 2009, he w ...
: "Pete was a pilot. I used to listen for hours in amazement, when he would tell the stories about how he found Fatland Farm, flying over it in a plane, hidden behind so many trees. He bought it and pulled all those trees out and made it into a showcase right next to Valley Forge Park." The Camiels spent several years renovating the mansion, rehabilitating the overgrown estate, and returning it to being a working farm. About 1950, they sold off a section along the south side of Pawlings Road, between the mansion and Saint Gabriel's Hall, for a housing development.


Pottstown Expressway

In 1951, following 138 years of family ownership, Herbert Johnson Wetherill sold Mill Grove to Montgomery County to create a bird sanctuary and house museum honoring John James Audubon. Twenty-five years later, it was announced that the planned route for the Pottstown Expressway was to go through the Audubon property. Camiel was credited with / blamed for applying political pressure to reroute the superhighway around the bird sanctuary:
Central to the arguments concerning politicians appears to be the controversial "Camiel Loop." ontgomery County Planning Commission associate directorPlutte said that the cost of rerouting the Pottstown Expressway around the home of Peter J. Camiel caused the price of the highway to jump from $5 million to $8 million, and most recently to more than $10 million in the past six months. As the highway leaves the connection with Betzwood Bridge and aims northwest toward Pottstown, it veers sharply south 'sic'' west down and around Camiel's farm, "Fatland." The parabolic dip in the road mean several miles of additional roadway, roadway that Pottstown was denied. Plutte said the Camiel loop was installed to avert a "potential challenge" arising out of an environmental study. Camiel's farm is near the Audubon Sanctuary, which according to original plans, would have had to surrender land to the highway crews. Federal funds, which pay for 70 per cent of the Pottstown Expressway, could be jeopardized by the taking of the park land, Plutte said.
Whether Camiel acted from selfish or selfless motives (or a combination of both), the rerouting of the Pottstown Expressway spared Mill Grove – now a National Historic Landmark – and minimized the adverse effect on Fatland. The Camiels owned the property for 44 years, and were buried together in its private cemetery.


Vaux Hill (2)

Camiel's land sales dramatically reduced Fatland's acreage—his housing development, land for the Pottstown Expressway, and his 1979 sale of 154 acres (62.3 hectare) between the expressway and the Schyulkill River to
Valley Forge National Historical Park Valley Forge National Historical Park is the site of the third winter encampment of the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War, taking place from December 19, 1777, to June 19, 1778. The National Park Service preserves the site a ...
. On July 16, 1990, Robert Owen Safford (1934–2011) and his wife Barbara Harvey (b. 1947) purchased the mansion on 18 acres from Camiel for $2.1 million. The couple changed the name of the property back to "Vaux Hill," the name James Vaux had given it in 1772.David Iames, "The Vaux Hill Sale," ''Antiques & Auction News'', October 8, 201

/ref> The Saffords expanded the mansion, erecting a west wing and end pavilion that mirrored the east wing and end pavilion—thus creating an overall symmetrical building (for the first time). They remodeled the mansion's interior, and filled it with sumptuous European furniture and decorative arts. Following Safford's 2011 death, his widow sold the decorative arts at Freeman's Auction House in Philadelphia. In 2014, Mrs. Safford put the estate up for sale with an asking price of $9 million for the 8,900-square-foot mansion on 15 acres, with the barn on 3 acres available for a separate sale. In February 2016, the asking price was reduced to $7 million.Melissa Romero
"Regal Vaux Hill Mansion back on market with $2M Chop,"
''Curbed Philly'', February 8, 2016.
The current property was sold for $2.74 million on May 28, 2021.1248 Pawlings Rd, Phoenixville, PA 19460 - Price History
from Zillow.


Notes


References


Further reading

*Jennifer Anne Stark, ''The Pawling Farmhouse at Walnut Hill: Valley Forge National Park'', masters thesis, University of Pennsylvania, December 199

*Rebecca Anne Hunt, ''Blessed Spot along the Perkiomen: An Historical Analysis of Mill Grove'', dissertation, University of Pennsylvania, 1994.


External links

{{commons category, Fatland (Audubon, Pennsylvania)
Pottstown Expressway Historic Overview
Greek Revival architecture in Pennsylvania Houses completed in 1776 Houses completed in 1845 Houses in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania John Haviland buildings Valley Forge