George Champlin Mason Sr.
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George Champlin Mason Sr. (1820-1894) was an American architect who built a number of mansions in Newport, Rhode Island, during the Gilded Age. He helped to found the Newport Historical Society as well.


Early life and education

George Champlin Mason was born to George Champlin Mason and Abigail Mumford Mason in Newport, Rhode Island in 1820. The Masons were a prominent New England family; his great-uncle
Christopher G. Champlin Christopher Grant Champlin (April 12, 1768March 18, 1840) was United States Representative, Senator and a slave trader from Rhode Island. Biography He was born in Newport in the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, the oldest ...
was a U.S. Senator, and his aunt Elizabeth was married to Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry. After his early schooling in Newport, he moved to New York at the age of 15, where he worked in a dry goods establishment for six years. He left because of poor health and not long afterwards went to Europe to study art in Rome, Paris, and Florence, specializing in landscape paintings. He returned to the United States in 1846 and two years later married Frances Elizabeth Dean. Their son,
George Champlin Mason Jr. George Champlin Mason Jr. (1849–1924) was an American architect who is considered the first professional architectural preservationist in the United States. Career George Champlin Mason Jr. was born in 1849 to Frances (Dean) and George Cha ...
(who would also become an architect), was born in 1849. Mason spent the 1840s trying unsuccessfully to make a living as landscape painter in a Romantic pastoral style derived from the Hudson River School. During this period, he published ''Newport and Its Environs'', a collection of 11 engravings of his landscape views of Newport that is one of the earliest books about Newport to showcase its potential as a vacation destination. It was noted as volume 1, but no further volumes ever materialized.


Architectural career


Architectural writings

In 1851, Mason switched professions and became part owner and editor of the ''
Newport Mercury ''The'' ''Newport Mercury'', was an early American colonial newspaper founded in 1758 by Ann Smith Franklin (1696-1763), and her son, James Franklin (1730–1762), the nephew of Benjamin Franklin. The newspaper was printed on a printing press i ...
'' newspaper. He often wrote about architectural subjects, and he worked with fellow citizens on developing the then-expanding plat of Newport. Beginning a few years later, he would occasionally write articles for the '' Providence Journal'', the '' New York Evening Post'', and other newspapers, sometimes using the pen names 'Aquidneck' and 'Champlin'. In 1854 he published ''Newport Illustrated'', a guidebook that emphasizes the history of Newport buildings and places, and in 1884 he published a compendium of his occasional pieces under the title ''Reminiscences of Newport''. Both were illustrated with black-and-white line drawings or engravings of Newport buildings, many of which are now long gone or substantially changed. Mason was also influential in the establishment of the Newport Historical Society (originally a branch of the Rhode Island Historical Society), and he was active in the
Redwood Library and Athenaeum The Redwood Library and Athenaeum is a subscription library, museum, rare book repository and research center founded in 1747, and located at 50 Bellevue Avenue in Newport, Rhode Island. The building, designed by Peter Harrison and completed ...
and other local organizations.


Solo practice

Around 1858, Mason resigned his editorship and began to study architecture in earnest. Two years later set himself up as an architect, opening the first professional architectural firm in Newport, where many of his 150 buildings are located. This was a period when Gilded Age New Yorkers of extreme wealth were building large summer homes in Newport, and Mason became a dominant architect of these residences in the 1860s. In 1860, Mason was commissioned to build the financier August Belmont's summer mansion "By-the-Sea". The commission came to him through Belmont's wife Caroline, who was a daughter of Commodore Matthew C. Perry, a relation of Mason's. "By-the-Sea" was an Italianate villa with many of the features that would become hallmarks of Mason's style: a formal, squarish building giving an impression of solidity; a modified French mansard roof; a three-bay entrance portico; and extensive use of bracketed trim. Mason's style owes something to that of the Providence architect Thomas Alexander Tefft, who died in 1859. Also in 1860, Mason designed another large Italianate villa as a Newport summer home for
Edmund Schermerhorn Edmund Henry Schermerhorn (December 5, 1815 – October 1, 1891) was an American businessman who commissioned George Champlin Mason Sr. to build him an Italianate villa, today known as Chepstow, in Newport, Rhode Island. Early life Schermerhorn ...
. Named " Chepstow", it was bequeathed with most of its furnishings intact to the Preservation Society of Newport County in 1986 and is now open to the public, one of a handful of buildings featured on the preservation society's website alongside more famous buildings like The Breakers. Chepstow includes features such as an interior staircase that pay deliberate homage to American pre-Revolutionary architecture, prefiguring the Colonial Revival period of the 1890s.


George C. Mason & Son

In 1867, Mason's son began working with him, and in 1871, he brought his son into partnership and renamed his firm George C. Mason & Son. In 1873, the firm designed the commanding officer's quarters (today known as the "Eisenhower House") at Fort Adams in Newport, which President Dwight D. Eisenhower used as his summer residence during his administration. "Woodbine Cottage," which Mason built for himself in 1873 in collaboration with his son, was a 23-room mansion in an ornate Swiss chalet style. Like the slightly earlier "Edgewater" (1869–70), it features the elaborate kinds of wooden trim that increasingly crept into Mason's later work. It has since been turned into a hotel, the Architect's Inn. Possibly the most stylistically adventurous of Mason's mature work is the "Loring Andrews House", which expresses the Modern Gothic style through facades that are almost completely covered in stick work. Sometime between 1881 and 1887, Mason was elected as an honorary member New York
Society of the Cincinnati The Society of the Cincinnati is a fraternal, hereditary society founded in 1783 to commemorate the American Revolutionary War that saw the creation of the United States. Membership is largely restricted to descendants of military officers wh ...
. Prior to 1887 Mason transferred to the recently reorganized Rhode Island Society of the Cincinnati.Portraits of the Presidents General of the Order of the Cincinnati and Roll of the Hereditary and Honorary Members on the 27th of July, 1887. Society of the Cincinnati of the State of Rhode Island. pg. 14. This was probably in recognition of his interest in preserving historical records and his family connection to Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry. Mason died in 1894 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and was buried in the
Island Cemetery The Common Burying Ground and Island Cemetery are a pair of separate cemeteries on Farewell and Warner Street in Newport, Rhode Island. Together they contain over 5,000 graves, including a colonial-era slave cemetery and Jewish graves. The pair ...
of Newport. He was inducted into the Rhode Island Heritage Hall of Fame in 2006. Many of Mason's buildings have been demolished to make way for residential subdivisions; however, seven of his residences still stand along the north side of Narragansett Avenue in Newport.


Partial list of buildings

* " Elm Court" (1853, for Boston merchant Andrew Robeson) * "Cliffs" (1859, for Newport mayor Daniel B. Fearing; since demolished) * "By-the-Sea" (1860, for August Belmont; demolished 1946) * "F. Sheldon House" (ca. 1860? since demolished) * " Chepstow" (1860–61, for
Edmund Schermerhorn Edmund Henry Schermerhorn (December 5, 1815 – October 1, 1891) was an American businessman who commissioned George Champlin Mason Sr. to build him an Italianate villa, today known as Chepstow, in Newport, Rhode Island. Early life Schermerhorn ...
) * "Henry Ledyard House" (1863–64) * "Harbourview" (1865, for Ayres P. Merrill; demolished ca. 1950) * "W.W. Tucker House" (1869; demolished 1938) * "Edgewater" (for J. Frederick Kernochan, 1869–70; demolished 1888) * "Loring Andrews House" (1871–72) * "Eisenhower House" (1873) * "Woodbine Cottage" (1873; also known as the "George Champlin Mason House"; now the Architect's Inn)


Publications

* ''Newport and Its Environs, Illustrated by a Series of Views''. Newport, R.I.: Chas. E. Hammett, 1848. * ''Newport Illustrated in a Series of Pen & Pencil Sketches''. New York: Appleton, 1854. * ''Newport and Its Cottages.'' J.R. Osgood, 1875. * ''The Old House Altered''. New York: G.P. Putnam's, 1878. * ''The Life and Works of Gilbert Stuart''. New York: Scribner's, 1879. * ''Reminiscences of Newport''. Newport, R.I.: Charles E. Hammett, 1884. * ''Annals of Trinity Church, Newport, Rhode Island 1698-1821''. Philadelphia: Evans Printing, 1889.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Mason, George Champlin Sr. 1820 births 1894 deaths 19th-century American architects Architects from Newport, Rhode Island