Warder Mansion

Warder Mansion
Location 2633 16th Street Northwest, NW, Washington, District of Columbia
Coordinates 38°55′26.4″N 77°2′9.96″W / 38.924000°N 77.0361000°W / 38.924000; -77.0361000Coordinates: 38°55′26.4″N 77°2′9.96″W / 38.924000°N 77.0361000°W / 38.924000; -77.0361000
Built 1885–88
rebuilt 1923–25
Architect H. H. Richardson
NRHP Reference # 72001437[1]

Warder Mansion (also known as Warder-Totten House) is an apartment complex at 2633 16th Street Northwest, in the Meridian Hill Park neighborhood of Washington, D.C. It is the only surviving building in the city designed by architect Henry Hobson Richardson.[2] In an early example of preservation commitment, the building was saved from demolition in the 1920s by being disassembled and moved 1.5 miles (2.4 km) north of its original site. In the 1990s, the Warder-Totten House's prospects for survival again looked bleak, but the building was saved a second time.

Warder

Benjamin H. Warder was president of Warder, Bushnell & Glessner Company, a major manufacturer of farm machinery. It was one of five companies merged in 1902 to form International Harvester.[3]

In 1885, Warder hired Boston architect H. H. Richardson to design his house at 1515 K Street NW. Richardson died in 1886, but his firm completed the house in 1888. Warder died in 1894, and his widow occupied the house until 1921.

Totten

Front doorway, circa-1900.

In 1923, the Warder House was about to be demolished to erect an office building. Architect George Oakley Totten, Jr. bought the exterior stone (except the front doorway, which reportedly went to the Smithsonian) and much of the interior woodwork. He transported the building, piece by piece (reportedly in a Model T Ford), to its present Meridian Hill site, reassembled it over two years, and converted it into an apartment house. The reconstructed building later housed the National Lutheran Council and the Antioch College of Law.[4]

The building was listed on the D.C. Inventory in 1964, and on the National Register in 1972.

Antioch College moved out in 1986. The building was vacant for more than a dozen years, and was largely reduced to a shell by fires and vandalism.[5] It was placed on the D.C. Preservation League's Most Endangered Places List in 1996, and remained on that list for several years.[6]

Renovated in 2001–02,[7] it now serves as the entrance to Warder Mansion, a complex of 38 one- and two-bedroom apartments carved out of the house and a 9-story addition.

Furniture

The Warder house once contained custom-made furnishings.

Warder's daughter Alice (1877–1952) married diplomat John Work Garrett (1872–1942) at the house in December 1908, with First Lady Edith Roosevelt in attendance. Ambassador Garrett eventually inherited his family's Baltimore mansion, "Evergreen," and subsequently moved some of the furnishings there. Evergreen eventually became Johns Hopkins University's Evergreen Museum & Library; its Warder pieces include a set of three Thomas Sheraton-inspired chairs and an ornately inlaid center table from the D.C. house's drawing room, and a handsome pair of possibly-architect-designed "throne" chairs carved with sunflowers, an ornate "W," and the year 1887.[8]

One of the Warder dining chairs is in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.[9]

See also

Notes

  1. "Asset detail: Warden-Totten House". National Park Service: Focus. Retrieved 2015-11-17.
  2. Richardson designed four houses in D.C.: the N. L. Anderson House (1881–83) at 16th & K Streets NW was demolished in 1925; the adjoining houses for Henry Adams and John Hay (1884–86) at 16th & H Streets NW were demolished in 1927 for construction of the Hay-Adams Hotel; and the Warder House.
  3. Warder, Bushnell & Glessner from Glessner House.
  4. The Warder Mansion from NewColumbiaHeights.
  5. This Old Wreck from Washington City Paper.
  6. Most Endangered Buildings List 1999 from D.C. Preservation League.
  7. The renovation was done by Sadler & Whitehead Architects and Commonwealth Architects. G. Martin Moeller, Jr., AIA Guide to the Architecture of Washington, D.C. (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2006), pp. 284–85.
  8. Warder throne chairs from Johns Hopkins University.
  9. Warder dining chair from Metropolitan Museum of Art.
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