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Ivy Cottage (West Whiteland Township, Pennsylvania)

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Historic house in Pennsylvania, United States United States historic place
Ivy Cottage
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
Ivy Cottage (West Whiteland Township, Pennsylvania) is located in PennsylvaniaIvy Cottage (West Whiteland Township, Pennsylvania)Show map of PennsylvaniaIvy Cottage (West Whiteland Township, Pennsylvania) is located in the United StatesIvy Cottage (West Whiteland Township, Pennsylvania)Show map of the United States
Location225 W. Lincoln Highway
Exton, PA 19341
Coordinates40°01′39″N 75°38′02″W / 40.02755°N 75.63384°W / 40.02755; -75.63384
Area2.4 acres (0.97 ha)
Built1799
ArchitectRichard Thomas
Architectural styleGeorgian, Queen Anne
NRHP reference No.84003961
Added to NRHPNovember 9, 2018

Ivy Cottage is a historic residence located in Exton, a census-designated place in West Whiteland Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania. Built in 1799 by politician and soldier Richard Thomas, the cottage started out as a plain stone farmhouse in the double-door Georgian style. It underwent extensive renovations and embellishments in the Queen Anne style in 1881 followed by an award-winning restoration in 2019. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on November 9, 2018.

History

Ivy Cottage circa 1881

Ivy Cottage was the finale of a building program by Richard Thomas, a prosperous Quaker farmer who served as a colonel of the Pennsylvania militia during the American Revolutionary War and went on to serve in the United States Congress. Thomas erected Whitford Lodge, a two-story brick manor house, circa 1782, followed by Whitford Hall circa 1796 and Ivy Cottage in 1799. The cottage was reportedly intended as a summer home for two unmarried women relatives of Colonel Thomas.

The property descended to Sarah Roberts Thomas (1823–1897), who lived in Philadelphia and summered at Ivy Cottage with her husband, William M. Bull (1820–1883). She oversaw an extensive renovation of the cottage in 1881, adding architectural flourishes as well as extensions and a porch. Ivy Cottage passed to Sarah's son, Episcopalian minister William Levi Bull, on her death. After Bull died in 1932, the cottage passed to his stepson, attorney and soldier George C. Chandler. Sarah's was the last major renovation until 2019—the house changed little in the ensuing century and stayed in the Thomas family.

In 2019, the Hankin Group, a local property developer, restored and converted Ivy Cottage into a pair of apartments, renaming the residence the Chandler House in honor of its previous owners, George G. and Ann Howell Chandler, who were descended from Colonel Thomas. The developer received the 2019 West Whiteland Township Historic Preservation Award.

Ivy Cottage was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on November 9, 2018.

Description

Ivy Cottage was constructed in 1799 as a plain Quaker farmhouse in the double-door Georgian manner, a vernacular style widely used in Chester County at the time but relatively unusual in West Whiteland Township. The building's core is rectangular, two-storied, double-piled, and gable-roofed with a box cornice and brick chimneys. The facade, facing south toward the Philadelphia and Lancaster Turnpike, is evenly divided into four bays and features double balanced entrances. Each of the four first-floor rooms contains a fireplace. A full basement lies beneath the house. A two-story wooden kitchen wing extends off the north wall.

Bull's 1881 renovation incorporated corbelled chimneys, elaborate mantles, slate roofing, a large porch on the western wall, and an enlarged service wing faced with stone and featuring picturesque dormer windows. Her highest-profile addition was a two-story pentagonal room known to the family as "La Sata" and featuring 16/1 windows with brick arches, shed dormers, and an exposed ground-to-roof brick chimney, in quintessential Queen Anne style.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Ivy Cottage". National Register of Historic Places. Retrieved 2022-11-08 – via National Park Service.
  2. ^ Wolf, Martha Leigh; Snyder, Diane Sekura (1982). A History of West Whiteland (Revised 2022 ed.). West Whiteland Historical Commission. Retrieved 2022-11-08.
  3. ^ Cope, Gilbert (1901). Genealogy of the Smedley Family, Descended from George and Sarah Smedley, Settlers in Chester County, Pennsylvania. Lancaster, PA: Wickersham Printing Company. p. 551.
  4. "2003 Vassar Show House and Gardens: Ivy Cottage in Exton, PA". Vassar Quarterly. Vol. 99, no. 1. 2003-03-01. p. 66. Retrieved 2022-11-08.
  5. "Sun Time". The Philadelphia Inquirer. 1959-03-15. p. 188. Retrieved 2022-11-08.
  6. Hostutler, Mark (2019-11-24). "Hankin Group Recognized for Restoration of Historic Property in Exton". VISTA.Today. Retrieved 2022-11-08.
US National Register of Historic Places in Pennsylvania
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While all of the Exton census-designated place is in West Whiteland Township, there are areas with Exton postal addresses that are not in the CDP and are not in the township.
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