Project posted by Robert C Chenoweth

T.S. Lackey House - The future Dragonfly Bed & Breakfast

Painting of the 1909 TS Lackey House
Painting of the 1909 TS Lackey House
Phase one - Kitchen Addition for Bed & Breakfast
Phase one - Kitchen Addition for Bed & Breakfast
Graded walk with bench and planted area accented by stone bowl, rain chains
Graded walk with bench and planted area accented by stone bowl, rain chains
Dining room
Dining room
Copy of original survey from 1909
Copy of original survey from 1909
Dining room
Dining room
Grand Stair - before renovation - 2nd floor
Grand Stair - before renovation - 2nd floor
3rd floor Bedroom
3rd floor Bedroom
eyebrow window in Attic / 4th floor
eyebrow window in Attic / 4th floor
Widow's walk with a view of Uniontown and the Laurel Highlands
Widow's walk with a view of Uniontown and the Laurel Highlands
Proposed Kitchen addition
Proposed Kitchen addition

Credits

From Robert C Chenoweth

Future home of the Dragonfly Bed & Breakfast in Uniontown, PA.

This mansion was built by T.S. Lackey around 1909. Mr. Lackey was a lawyer for the Coal Baron, J.V. Thompson whose, Oak Hill Estate, was developed in 1903 and conceptualized by the architect Daniel Burnham (the Architect of the Flatiron Building & the creator of "The Plan of Chicago" published in 1909. Mr. Thompson chopped out 5 1/2 acres for Mr. Lackey moderately sized home (only 11,000sqft, compared to Oak Hill at over 18,300sqft). After Mr. Lackey had passed on, the home was the site of a family murder suicide. It was purchased by the Saint Anthony Friary and has been a Friary for the last 50 years.

When looking for Architectural styles, Colonial Revival was a combination of many earlier styles. The following was my attempt to refine the classification of the architecture & was taken from "A Field Guide to American Houses" by Virginia & Lee McAlester ... A must have book for anyone interested in American Architectural History.

Colonial Revival: 1800 to ~1940's
• "Colonial Revival" refers to the entire rebirth of interest in the early English & Dutch houses of the Atlantic seaboard. The Georgian & Adams styles form the backbone. Details from 2 or more styles are freely combined so a pure copy is far less common than an eclectic mixture.

• principle sub-type:

- Hipped roof with full width porch - built before 1915

- Asymmetrical - porch arrangements (side porch)

• Variants & Details: as with Georgian and Adam prototypes - entrances, cornices and windows

- Windows: multi-pane upper sashes hung above lower sashes that have a single large pane are common (windows at chapel either side of the front door)

-- also seen in Craftsman - and these would not have had window mullions in the lower sash (like your house - but this is more likely due to replacement window cost, as the upper sash would have vertical mullions)

- Masonry predominates in high style examples

Georgian: 1700's to 1830's
• Roof balustrades (after 1750)

• Pedimented dormers (1720-80's)

• Deep cornice with emphasized dentils

• Corner coins (1720 - 1780's)

• High belt line stone foundation - emphasized floor level

Adams: 1780's to 1840's
• Emphasized cornice (often deeper than Georgian) as found on your house w/ dentils

• Hipped three story (although more common in the south & with lower slope roof)

• Palladian windows (three part windows like those at the chapel front & the third story cross gable above the front door)

- the third story windows are set in a wooden frame (architrave) more common in masonry for both

Georgian & Adams (usually omitted in Adams after 1800)
• Elliptical windows "high style elaborations" (South West wall - stain glass - 2nd story above the built-in porch)

• Flat stone lintel and sills at windows in masonry (decorative window crowns far less common in masonry examples)

All of this can be helpful when trying to piece together a restoration or renovation and allows for a more focused search than the often overused Colonial Revival.