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Survey of
Historic Sites and Buildings
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Berkeley
Virginia
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Berkeley
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Charles
City County, on the south side of Va. 5, about 8 miles west of Charles
City.
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In historical interest this fine mansion has few
rivals among the James River plantations. It was the birthplace and
lifelong home of Benjamin Harrison V (1726-91), signer of the
Declaration of Independence and three-term Governor of Virginia, as well
as the birthplace and boyhood residence of his son, William Henry
(1773-1841), ninth President of the United States and grandfather of
Benjamin (1833-1901), the 23d President.
Benjamin Harrison IV, the signer's father, built the
structure in 1726. In 1773 it was the birthplace of William Henry.
During his youth, in 1781 British troops under Benedict Arnold plundered
the plantation, but did not seriously harm the mansion. When Benjamin V
died in 1791, William Henry's oldest brother, Benjamin VI, inherited
Berkeley. Sometime in the 1790's, one of the Harrisons, probably
Benjamin VI, made some architectural alterations and redecorated the
interior in the Adam style.
As a young man, following attendance at
Hampden-Sydney College and a fling at medical education, William Henry
emigrated to the Northwest Territory to seek his fortune and never again
lived permanently at the plantation. He did, however, visit his family
there, and in 1841 paid a last visit after his election to the
Presidency. At that time, he apparently wrote his inaugural address in
the room in which he had been born; he died only a month later in the
White House and was interred in a private cemetery, present Harrison
Tomb State Memorial, in North Bend, Ohio.
By the time of the Civil War, the plantation was
known as Harrison's Landing. In 1862 it served as a supply base and camp
for the Union Army of the Potomac following its retreat from Malvern
Hill, Va., which ended the Peninsula Campaign. Gen. George B. McClellan
utilized the mansion as his headquarters. While quartered nearby, Gen.
Daniel Butterfield composed the famous bugle call "Taps."
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Berkeley. (National Park Service, Boucher,
1976.) |
By 1915 the early Georgian mansion was in poor
condition. Subsequent owners have restored it to its 18th-century
appearance. This included removal of a 19th-century porch on all four
sides, replacement of the window sash and exterior door framings, and
reconstruction of the center stairs. The exterior has been altered
somewhat over the years, but retains much of the original structure and
character.
The house is 2-1/2 stories high and has a dormered,
gable roof with two tall interior ridge chimneys and distinctive
pedimented gable ends, including modillioned cornices. The brick walls
are laid in Flemish bond. Gauged brick is employed in the flat window
arches, the belt course, and door pediments. The broad-piered central
doors on the north and south elevations, with pediments in gauged brick,
are reconstructions. Two detached, two-story, brick dependencies, set
slightly south of the house on the river side, were built in the 1840's
to replace similar structures that had been erected sometime before
1800.
The center hall plan has been slightly modified. The
hall bisects the four rooms on the first floor into pairs. A small
stairs in the northwestern corner was probably inserted about 1800. Most
of the interior finish reflects the Adam alterations of the 1790's. The
upper floors are used as a private residence, but the basement and first
floor may be visited. The unmarked grave of signer of the Declaration
Benjamin Harrison is in the family cemetery, a quarter of a mile
southeast of the plantation.
http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/presidents/site61.htm
Last Updated: 22-Jan-2004
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