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Squire's Castle

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Vacant building in Northeast Ohio, US
Squire's Castle in 2008

Squire's Castle is a shell of a building located in the North Chagrin Reservation of the Cleveland Metroparks in Willoughby Hills, Ohio.

Construction of the building

Feargus B. Squire was an executive with the Standard Oil Company and former mayor of Wickliffe, Ohio. Squire's earliest known residence was at 1729 Euclid Avenue in Cleveland. In 1905, Squire moved to 7809 Euclid Avenue. Squire completed work in 1902 on Cobblestone Garth, a Victorian mansion located in Wickliffe, Ohio. The Squires moved from their Euclid Avenue home into Cobblestone Garth in 1910.

About 1890, Squire purchased 525 acres (2.12 km) of forest land near what is now Willoughby Hills, Ohio, east of Cleveland. He called it River Farm Estate, and planned to turn it into an English country estate complete with manor house. About 1895, Squire began construction on a gatekeeper's house in the Romanesque Revival style. The structure, which was exceedingly rustic (lacking electricity, natural gas, running water, or sewer) was completed about 1897.

The outer walls are of locally-quarried Euclid bluestone, a form of bluish-colored sandstone found throughout the greater Cleveland area. The structure originally had a ground floor, two upper floors, and a basement. Its windows were of leaded glass.

Use of the structure

Feargus B. Squire

Squire abandoned plans for a manor house after encountering difficulty obtaining building materials and labor. Squire and his daughter used the gatekeeper's house as an occasional weekend country home (even spending most of the summer of 1903 there). But Squire's wife disliked the house, and Squire rarely visited it after 1908. He sold the estate and gatekeeper's house to developers in 1922.

After the developers went bankrupt, the estate was seized by a local bank. The Cleveland Park Board (precursor to Cleveland Metroparks) purchased most of the land from the bank in 1925. The park board began calling the structure "Squire's Castle". Cleveland Metroparks removed the upper floors and filled in the basement.

Squire's Castle was heavily vandalized over the years, with vandals removing the leaded glass windows and stripping the interior of almost all architectural and decorative details. The structure was somewhat restored in 1995.

Urban myth

On December 26, 1876, Squire married Louisa Christiana Braymaier of Cleveland. She died on October 29, 1927, at Cobblestone Garth in Wickliffe.

A myth about the structure grew up over the years. The details varied, but the essential story was that Louisa Squire woke one night during a storm and went downstairs to investigate. Startled by lightning (which illuminated the stuffed heads of animals in the structure's trophy room), she fell down the stairs and broke her neck. According to this legend, her ghost may be seen floating through Squire's Castle. The myth is false, as Louisa Squire did not die in the building.

References

  1. Hartman 1991, p. 358.
  2. "The Country Estates of Cleveland Men". Ohio Architect and Builder. January 1904. pp. 28–34. Retrieved October 11, 2015.
  3. ^ Mikula, Jackie (September 25, 1997). "Imagination Is Castle's Keystone". The News Sun. Archived from the original on October 20, 2007. Retrieved October 11, 2015.
  4. ^ Carey, Allison (March 20, 2006). "What's the Deal With...Squire's Castle?". The Plain Dealer. p. A2.
  5. Hannibal, Joseph T.; Scherzer, Benjamin A.; Saja, David B. (2007). "The Euclid Bluestone of Northeastern Ohio: Quarrying History, Petrology, and Sedimentology". In Shaffer, Nelson R.; DeChurch, Deborah A. (eds.). Proceedings of the 40th Forum on the Geology of Industrial Minerals. Indiana Geological Survey Occasional Paper 67 (PDF). Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana Geological Survey.
  6. "Squire's Castle". Encyclopedia of Cleveland History. 2018. Retrieved October 19, 2018.
  7. Derby 1935, p. 176.
  8. MacKeigan, Judith (October 23, 2014). "Squire's Legacy". Cleveland Metroparks. Retrieved October 11, 2015; Roy, Chris (July 2, 2018). "Squire's Castle". Cleveland Historical. Retrieved October 18, 2018.
  9. "Died". The Plain Dealer. October 31, 1927. p. 20.
  10. ^ Willis 2013, pp. 86–88.
  11. DeMarco, Laura (October 19, 2018). "You don't believe in ghosts? Haunted spots beg to differ". The Plain Dealer. p. 5.

Bibliography

External links

41°34′48″N 81°25′9″W / 41.58000°N 81.41917°W / 41.58000; -81.41917

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