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New Garden Historical Commission
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Report from the University of Delaware
Art History Department
Freed-Hoopes-Wilson-Brown House
New Garden Township
Chester County,
Pennsylvania.
Begun c. 1735-50;
Demolished December, 2002.

Southern View from
Southwood Rd.
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The Freed-Hoopes-Wilson-Brown House, New
Garden Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania, reflects four
major construction periods between the second quarter of the 18th
century and the late 1830s. Changes continued to be made after
this period including an upgrade of interior finishes during the
1930s consistent with other colonial revival projects in the
region. The house was demolished in autumn of 2002.
Report: Bernard Herman
Research: Margaret Jones, Mary Sproat
Project Coordinator: Michael Leja
Fieldwork: Bernard Herman, Jeff Klee, Eric
Gollanek, Michael Leja

Western view
Period I, 1735-1750:
Joseph Freed was the cousin of Benjamin
Freed who purchased the tract of 300 acres on August 16, 1715
from Thomas Garnet who had the patent granted March 20, 1714.
About 30 of the 300 acres were in New Castle County. (From map of
William Penn, Jr.'s Manor.)

Reconstructed
Ground Floor Plan, Period I
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The earliest visible construction phase for
the house likely dates to the second quarter of the 18th
century. The earliest phase of the existing house, however,
represents an addition to an even earlier structure that abutted
the west gable. No conclusive architectural evidence for the
appearance of the older building survived, and it disappeared in
the third quarter of the 18th century with the
construction of the Period II wing.
The period I house consisted of a two-story
stone structure with a fireplace in the northeast corner. The
masonry walls were coursed rubble construction laid in a clay
mortar and finished with finger-struck joints. The quality of the
mortar joints on the front and back are markedly different
indicating a clear hierarchy of finish and the inferior status of
the back wall. The mortar joints on the west wall are less clear,
but the surviving elements are consistent with the front
elevation to the point where they met the wall of the
pre-existing structure. The front elevation (south side) was
pierced with a door and a window on the ground floor. A single
window in the west gable provided additional light. A door, also
in the west gable, gave access into the older house, which was
likely downgraded in use to a kitchen with the construction of
the stone dwelling. A door in the rear or north wall opened into
a back workyard. A winder stair in the southeast corner led up to
the second floor and down to the cellar. Both stories were
finished with plaster walls and exposed ceiling joists of hewn
and planed oak. The ceiling joists were finished with simple
straight edges and were whitewashed.
Period I Entrance
The section of the front
(south) wall showing the location of the original period
I entrance. Stucco has been removed to reveal the seams
where the opening was filled in during the period IV
remodeling.
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Period I Rear Door
Exterior view of the back
(north) wall window that was originally the period I rear
door. Stucco has been removed to show the seams where the
opening originally went to the ground. The door was
converted to a window during the period II rebuilding,
when the door was moved to the right of the window and
put on axis with the front door.
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Although the only evidence for the chimney
in the northeast corner is the relieving arch in the cellar, its
placement suggests that the original fireplace wall for period I
included not only doors to the stairs, but also a closet adjacent
to the fireplace jamb.
Period I Relieving Arch
This massive relieving
arch in the basement supported the original fireplace and
chimney stack in the period I house. To the right are
stairs leading down to the subcellar dairy constructed in
period IV.
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The 1752 will and inventory of Benjamin
Freed provide additional evidence about the internal organization
of the house. Benjamin Freed willed "this plantation I now
live upon containing three hundred acres" to his wife
Deborah for life and then to his cousin Joseph Freed. Following
Deborah Freeds death, Joseph also received a number of high
status objects from the "Parlour." These included a
desk and book case, clock and clock case, chest of drawers, large
oval table, six walnut chairs, two arm chairs, and large looking
glass. All of these objects appear clumped together in Benjamin
Freeds inventory along with linens and tableware. Notable
in this constellation of objects is the best bed and a close
stool, both suggesting the parlor served as a chamber, at least
in Benjamin Freeds final illness. Three other additional
clusters of household furnishings emerge from the inventory.
Beds, chairs, chests of drawers describe the contents of one or
more chambers; a couch, table, chairs, another bed, and spinning
wheels indicate a common room; cooking implements and other items
related to shop work record the presence of a kitchen.
The evident quality of the period I
dwelling (stone, two-stories, plaster finishes, and a large
fireplace) suggest that the oldest portion of the dwelling is
Benjamin Freeds parlor. Given the size of the house, it is
also likely that the upper story contained two or more chambers.
The inventorys implication that there are two additional
rooms (a kitchen and common room) support the idea that the
earliest surviving fabric of the house may well be an addition to
an earlier structure erected following Freeds 1715 purchase
of the property. The off-center west gable window and door
opening provide evidence that the "first" house stood
against the northwest corner.
Period II, 1765-1785:
X-2-443. 26 February 1765 Joseph Freed
to Isaac & Lydia Allen. Three tracts: 151 acres and 24 acres
in New Garden, 132 acres in Millcreek Hundred. Bounding
neighbors: Isaac Jackson, Isaac Allen, late William Rowen, Andrew
McIntire, late William Roe, late Simon Hadley, George Beale,
Great Road to Newport.
X-2-167. 22 September 1769 Isaac and
Lydia Allen to David and Esther Hoopes, 205 acres.

Reconstructed
Ground Floor Plan, Period II
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During the third quarter of the 18th
century (likely c. 1765-1775) the house was dramatically changed
through the addition of a two-story stone wing on the west gable
and the reworking of period I doors and windows. This phase also
likely resulted in the demolition of the "first" house
that the Freeds had converted into a kitchen.
The addition consisted of a two-room block
with each room served by a corner fireplace. An exterior door
opened directly into the front room lit by two windows, but the
rear room seems to have possessed only a single window in its
north elevation. The construction of the new wing required the
builders to modify the pattern of access between the two portions
of the house. The southern door was created by the removal of the
period I window frame, which was sawn into nailing blocks, and
the removal of masonry to the floor. The old period I door that
opened into the former kitchen was studded in and lathed and
plastered on both sides. The infilled door remained recessed in
the period I parlor and would very likely have been fitted out as
a cupboard.
Period II Relieving Arch
The relieving arch in the
basement that supported the period II fireplaces and
chimneys at the west end of the house.
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The wing achieved several
architectural and social objectives for the family. First, the
addition created not only a larger house, but also a house with
more specifically defined interior spaces. The period I parlor
became a common room that opened onto the new ground floor parlor
that communicated in turn with the new back room in the addition.
The southwest parlor was clearly the best of the two and may have
served business as well as social needs. The demoted parlor in
the period I portion of the house, was downgraded to the status
of a common room and likely received a new fireplace inserted
into the old one. The period I house may have served variously as
a kitchen and general family space. The new room in the northwest
corner with its lone window probably served as a downstairs
chamber.
Part of the period II enlargement process
also led to the insertion of a new door in the northwest corner
of the period I house and the conversion of the old door into a
window. These changes created a "cross-passage" through
the house defined by the opposed openings at the upper end of the
old period I house. At this point in the buildings history
the house contained two stairs. The old stair in the period I
house still provided the means for moving from the ground floor
to the second story and attic. The new stair in the northwest
back room rose to the second floor chambers in the period II
addition. The presence of two stairs suggests two conclusions.
First, the construction of the wing included no direct
second-story access between the two portions of the house.
Second, the presence of two stairs posits a domestic arrangement
for servants that required segregated access, at least to the
second floor backroom in the addition.
Period II Rear Door
The old period I rear door
was converted to a window during the period II
rebuilding, and the door was moved to the right and put
in line with the front door. Stucco has been removed near
the right edge of the wall to reveal the lines in the
masonary (between red arrows) of this new doorway. This
doorway was closed up during the period IV rebuilding.
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Period III, 1800-1810:
X-2-171. 7 Oct 1803. David & Esther
Hoopes to Thomas & Mary Wilson 2700 pounds for 40 acres in
New Castle Co. and 150 acres in New Garden Township for a total
of 190 acres, house, plantation, tract & tanyard. Plus 7
acres from Moses & Hannah Rowen
C-2-140. 26 June 1784. Excepting water
privileges of Moses Rowen. David & Esther Hoopes to Samuel
Walker 23 acres in New Castle County, DE. bounding neighbors:
Isaac Jackson, Wm. Thompson, John McIntire, Moses Beam, Thomas
Moore, Samuel Walker, Newport Road.

Reconstructed
Ground Floor Plan, Period III
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The house stood in its period II form until
the first decade of the 19th century when its owners
decided to reconfigure the interior spaces within the existing
walls. Their efforts changed the house in significant ways that
largely disappeared under the changes to come in the 1830s.
The northwest room was the focus for most
of the c. 1800-1810 alterations that remade this ground floor
space into a kitchen. The corner fireplace was cut back and a new
fireplace inserted using the remnants of the existing stack for
the south jamb and erecting a new supporting pier in the cellar
for the north jamb. A bake oven was added to the exterior of the
house, an amenity that required cutting through the exterior
wall, inserting the bake oven door and part of the dome inside
the wall and continuing the oven structure outside the house. In
addition to the changes in the fireplace, the builders punched a
back door through the north wall, creating direct exterior access
between the domestic work spaces and a kitchen yard.
Period III Bake Oven
Stucco was chipped away to reveal remenants
of the arched brick roof of the period III bake oven that
extended out from the west wall of the house.
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The fact of a new kitchen placed in the
back of the house transformed the old three-room arrangement of a
common room, front parlor, back chamber into a very different
sort of house reflecting emerging sensibilities about the
organization of everyday life. The period I house very likely saw
its fireplace closed down into an even smaller, more
"refined" opening and the status of the room upgraded
into a large parlor with no direct access to the new kitchen. The
period II front parlor assumed the role of a dining room directly
served by the kitchen behind it. The net effect of these changes
made the house conceptually more linear in its progression from
best room to dining room to parlor. The changes also pushed
service and domestic work to the back of the house and at the
farthest remove from the newly rehabilitated best room in the
period I dwelling. The changes reinforced the social hierarchies
and concern for domestic segregation reflected in the new plan.
Period IV, c. 1830s:
G-3-351. 25 March 1812. Thomas and Mary
Wilson et ux to Joseph Roman, $7472 for 145 +/- acres. Probably
rented by Thomas Brown, who purchased the property in 1834.
At the same time a parcel was separated
from the main property and sold:
N-4-17. 25 March 1812. Thomas and Mary
Wilson to James Walker $3210 tanyard and a parcel of land. 1
April 1836 30 acres and a tanyard deeded to Hiram Walker
"along said line to land sold to Joseph Roman." This
parcel contains the house now known as the Glover House.

Ground
Floor Plan, Period IV
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The building episode that resulted in the
present appearance and organization of the house occurred in the
1835-1845 period. This episode wrought extreme changes in the
fabric of the house and all but erased much of its earlier
history. While some of the period II and III woodwork (notably
doors) survived these changes in the west end of the house,
virtually nothing from period I endured..
The builders goal centered on
converting the old house into a fashionable center-passage
dwelling. To do this masons and carpenters gutted the period I
house, demolished the original two-story east gable, and pulled
up the floor joists in the east end of the house. They then
extended the house to the east and inserted two new partition
walls to create a center entry and stair hall on top of the
period I relieving arch in the cellar. The original front door
and period II back door in the oldest part of the house were
sealed, the period I bulkhead entry on the north face of the
house was infilled and a new cellar entry introduced to the front
of the house, two new door openings were cut through the masonry
of the front and back walls providing access into the stair hall.
Finally, the builders inserted a new fireplace against the former
west gable of the period I house. This required shifting the
period II door between the old common room and period II front
parlor eight inches to the south.
Period IV - New Center Stairway

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New Period IV Fireplaces on new
eastern wall
The period IV fireplace
on the easternmost wall of the house, first floor. It was
the most elaborate in the house and served the new period
IV parlor.

Second floor period IV fireplace, east end
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Period
IV - New fireplace against the former west gable of the
period I house.
The period IV fireplace
inserted into the west wall of the period I house. It
occupies part of what was the original doorway from the
period I house into the earlier wooden structure.
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Period IV Roofline

The period IV renovations included a
new roof which spanned the entire length of the house.
The dormer windows were in a very elegant classical
revival style, which suggests that they also dated from
the this renovation.

The entire length of rafters was
uniform and looked like the product of a single building
episode.
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The changes to the house did not stop with
the radical reconfiguration to the oldest section, but continued
into the already extensively reworked period II end of the
building. A new window introduced into the west gable end matched
the other period IV windows with its round reveals. Period IV
also appears to be when the two rooms in the west end of the
house were made into one and a new kitchen (possibly a frame shed
addition) added to the north side of the period II elevation.
Changes made in period V (1930s) however, may account for these
changes as well. In either case, the period III kitchen space
appears to have been upgraded and abandoned. This also appears to
be the moment when the new subcellar was excavated in the floor
of the period I cellar.
Doorways in Western Front Room
The doorways to the winding staircase
at the western end of the house. The door at left leads
to a winding staircase to the second floor; the door in
the center to a winding staircase to the basement; the
doors at right to storage closets.
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The fireplace on the first floor at the far west
wall of the house. This fireplace was supported by the
period II relieving arch and replaced the back-to-back
fireplaces that served the front and back rooms of the
period II addition. The wall that divided the front and
back rooms during periods II and III has been removed. At
right a stone ledge jutting out from the wall served the
bake oven installed in period III.
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Second Floor Closet Interior 
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Period IV Dairy At approximately the time of the period IV
renovations, a subcellar dairy was added.
The view down the stairway
leading from the cellar to the subcellar dairy.
The arch inside the dairy.
The arched roof of the
dairy.
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At the conclusion of the period IV
remodeling, the house bore little resemblance to its former self.
What it did reflect was a continuation of social changes begun in
period III. The new parlor in the east end of the house was even
more distant from domestic work spaces and screened from them by
the creation of two new spaces (stair hall and sitting room)
carved out of the oldest parts of the building. Access to the
upper stories was now contained in the unheated stair hall and no
longer in a principal living space (the old common room). As the
site of everyday life the 1830s house was even more attenuated,
more hierarchical, and more specialized in its internal
organization.
Appendices:
Deed Run for the property known in 2002 as
the Glover place, located on Southwood Road, owned in 1883 by
John Speakman. Compiled by Margaret Jones, November 2002.
L-8-146 16 March 1874. Thomas & Hannah
Marvel to John Speakman (on Breous map) $4900 for 31+/- acres
Y-6-373 1 March 1863. Evan & Joanna
Brown to Thomas & Hannah Marvel $3525 for 31+/- acres
M-6-130 1 April 1857. Hiram & Mary
Walker to Evan & Joanna Brown $3500 for 30 acres and a
certain tanyard (in 1859 bounded by Joseph Roman now David M.
Brown, in 1859 bounded by land of Joseph Roman now Evan Brown)
N-4-17 25 March 1812. Thomas Wilson to
James Walker $3210 tanyard and a parcel of land. 1 April 1836 30
acres and a tanyard deeded to Hiram Walker "along said line
to land sold to Joseph Roman," held (rented?) by Thomas
Brown.
M-3-3 20 March 1812. Thomas Wilson &
Mary Wilson sold to James
Walker $2528 for 30 acres. (This was when
the so-called Glover place was split off from the property to the
north eventually known as the Brown place.)
G-3-351 25 March 1812. Thomas & Mary
Wilson et ux to Joseph Roman $7472 for 145 +/- acres (bounding
neighbors Wm Thompson, John McIntire, Isaac Chambers, land sold
to James Walker)
X-2-171 7 Oct 1803. David & Esther
Hoopes to Thomas & Mary Wilson 2700 pounds for 40 acres in
New Castle Co. total of 190 acres, house, plantation, tract &
tanyard. Plus 7 acres from Moses & Hannah Rowen
C-2-140 26 June 1784. Excepting water
privileges of Moses Rowen. David & Esther Hoopes to Samuel
Walker 23 acres in New Castle County, DE. bounding neighbors:
Isaac Jackson, Wm. Thompson, John McIntire, Moses Beam, Thomas
Moore, Samuel Walker, Newport Road.
X-2-167 22 September 1769 Isaac & Lydia
Allen to David & Esther Hoopes 205 acres, i.e. tanyard and
tract to the north.
X-2-443 26 February 1765 Joseph Freed to
Isaac & Lydia Allen. Three tracts: 151 acres and 24 acres in
New Garden, 132 acres in Millcreek Hundred. Bounding neighbors:
Isaac Jackson, Isaac Allen, late William Rowen, Andrew McIntire,
late William Roe, late Simon Hadley, George Beale, Great Road to
Newport.
Joseph Freed was the cousin of Benjamin
Fredd who purchased the tract of 300 acres on August 16, 1715
from Thomas Garnet who had the patent granted March 20, 1714.
About 30 additional acres were in New Castle County. (From map of
William Penn, Jr.'s Manor.)
Supplementary information:
The Great Road from Newport to Lancaster
was known by the name of the Limestone Road.
From original road papers: Vol. 25,
documents 71-74. In 1807, a petition was made to have a road from
Septimus Evans' lime kiln, beginning at the Newark Road and
terminating at the State Line near Limestone Road, near Thomas
Wilson's house. When built, this road was known as Southwood
Road.
Verified title search for Evan Brown
property (14 December 1933; 1417B)
David Hoopes 1780-1803
Thomas Wilson 1703-1812
Joseph Roman 1812-1834
Thomas Brown 1834-1853
Evan Brown 1853-1883
Francis Walker 1883-1923
Mary/Henry Ewart 1923-1923
William Ford 1923-1929
Harry Ford 1929-1933
Howard Ford 1933 to date
Verified title search for David M. Brown
property (12 May 1909; 1332) property to the west of the Speakman
place and part of Thomas Brown's holdings
Caleb Pusey 1750
Joseph Jordon 1799-1805
John Way 1804-1806
William Chambers 1806-1811
Thomas Brown 1811-1853
David M. Brown 1853-1886 intestate
Alice T. Brown widow, d. 1895
Anna Brown Kelton & William N. Kelton
1886 to date (Kelton sold in 1950 to Leon Wilkinson)