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Mantle Fielding
Boxly
[edit]- Copley, Frank Barkley (1875–1941) (1923). Frederick W. Taylor, Father of Scientific Management. Vol. (2 Vols.). Harper & Brothers.
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) LCCN 23-17530; OCLC 807494 (all editions).
- Vol. 1 – via HathiTrust (University of Michigan Library) .
- Vol. 2 – via HathiTrust (University of California Libraries) .
1904 – "Boxley" (or "Boxly") – Frederick Winslow Taylor house, 8410 Saint Martin's Lane, at Seminole Avenue (NWC), Chestnut Hill. Olmsted Brothers, landscape architects. Frederick W.G. Peck (né Frederick William Gunster Peck; 1909–1998), landscape architect, acquired the property in 19??. Harold Van du Zee (1859–1917), civil engineer. Robert Henry Bender (1872–1943), gardner.[1][2]
Boxly is part of the land given by William Penn to Francis David Pastorius, who came to America in 1683. It passed through various hands until in 1803 it came into pos session of John Du Barry, a Frenchman who laid out the grounds in the French style.[3]
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"Boxley"
The Wyck Barn
[edit]William Laws Boswell (1828–1912) died at 28 West Walnut Street, Germantown, August 8, 1912.
- The Alumni Register. "Necrology: William Laws Boswell". 15 (1). University of Pennsylvania. September 1912 – via Google Books (University of Minnesota).
Reginald Devereux Kernan, in 1920, lived at 28 West Walnut Lane.
- Harvard College – Class of 1905. "Fourth Report". Norwood, Massachusetts: Plimpton Press. June 1920 – via Google Books (University of Michigan).
The Tuleyries
[edit]Re: The Tuleyries
Graham Furber Blandy (1868–1926), a nephew of Mrs. Andrew Carnegie, around 1905, acquired The Tuleyries, near White Post, Virginia, and adjacent lands totaling over 900 acres. Blandy hired Mantle Fielding to restore and improve the mansion. The greatest care was taken to preserve the original beauty of the place. Mosey, a former slave, worked for years repairing the stone walls. Upon Blandy's death, his widow, Georgette Haven Borland (maiden; 1886–1939) inherited part of the Tuleyries estate. The remainder of the estate was bequeathed to the University of Virginia for an experimental farm. (see Blandy Experimental Farm and the Virginia State Arboretum)
- Purchased from Col. U. L. Boyce
- 1903: Purchased the Tuleyries Estate for $20,500.
- 1905: Purchased the Tuleyries Estate, 785 acres, for $50,000
- March 1905: Purchased 215 acres, adjoining Jacob S. Garver, for $18,000
- Boxwood Bulletin (The); Wilson, Alice B. (Alice Elsie "Ella" née Borland; 1887–1987) (April 1964). "April 1964" (PDF) (re: The Tuleyries). . 3 (4). Boyce, Virginia: American Boxwood Society: 59–60. Retrieved August 24, 2022.
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(help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) ISSN 0006-8535; OCLC 2445419.
- Baker, "Nellie" Browne (née Ellen Fauntleroy Browne; 1882–1975) (entry) (1930) [1929]. Christian, Frances Archer (née Frances Williamson Archer; 1864–1968); Massie, Susanne Williams (née Susanne Coleman Williams; 1861–1952) (eds.). Entry → "The Tuleyries" in Homes and Gardens in Old Virginia. Richmond: J.W. Fergusson & Sons. p. 170 – via Internet Archive (Marygrove College).
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) LCCN 30-13228; OCLC 9800024 (all editions)."The Tuleyries". Homes and Gardens in Old Virginia (revision of the 1929 1st ed.). Richmond: Garden Club of Virginia. 1953. pp. 517–519. Retrieved August 25, 2022 – via HathiTrust (UC Davis) . LCCN 53-11461; OCLC 1658741 (all editions).
Published work
[edit]
- Fielding, Mantle (1914). "Paintings by Gilbert Stuart Not Mentioned in Mason's Life of Stuart". Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography (re: Gilbert Stuart). 38 (3): 311–334 – via HathiTrust (NYPL) . JSTOR 20086177 ; OCLC 3257587 (all editions).
- Referenced work: Mason, George Champlin, Sr. (1820–1894) (1907). The Life and Works of Gilbert Stuart. Charles Scribner's Sons – via HathiTrust (Harvard) .
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) LCCN 10-22179; OCLC 258838 (all editions).
- Fielding, Mantle (1925). Catalogue of an Exhibition of Portraits by John Neagle (Final ed.). Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts – via HathiTrust (Getty Research Institute) . OCLC 564446786 (all editions), 1336302336, 883977801, 11903955, 11903955.Re: Exhibition at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts: April 12, 1925 – May 13, 1925.
- Fielding, Mantle (1917). American Engravers Upon Copper and Steel ("Biographical Sketches and Check Lists of Engravings" – "A Supplement to David McNeeley Stauffer's American Engravers") – via Google Books (Penn State) . LCCN 17-28857; OCLC 407133366 (all editions) (alternate link – via Internet Archive – UC Berkeley ).
- Referenced work: Stauffer, David McNeeley (1845–1913) (1907). American Engravers Upon Copper and Steel (in 2 parts). The Grolier Club of the City of New York.
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) LCCN 07-21731; OCLC 217218223 (all editions).
Grand Slam Finals – Mixed Doubles
[edit]Result | Year | Championship | Surface | Partner | Opponents | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Loss | 1895 | U.S. Championships | Grass | Amy Williams | Juliette Atkinson Edwin P. Fischer |
6–4, 6–8, 2–6 |
Loss | 1896 | U.S. Championships | Grass | Amy Williams | Juliette Atkinson Edwin P. Fischer |
2–6, 3–6, 3–6 |
The Page Memorial Chapel was commissioned by descendants of Alanson Sumner Page (1825–1905) and Elsie A. Benson (maiden; 1835–1996). A stone structure, Fielding designed it in a Gothic Revival style. The interior windows were designed by Frederick Wilson (1858–1932), a lead designer of Tiffany Studios of New York City. It stands at the entrance of Riverside Cemetery. The cemetery, in 1993, was designated on the list of National Register of Historic Places.
References
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ Copley, 1923, pp. 188–189. sfn error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFCopley,1923 (help)
- ^ List of Gardens, 1922, p. 87.
- ^ Harshberger, 1924.
References
[edit]- Jellett, Edwin Costley (1860–1929) (1914). Germantown Gardens and Gardners. Germantown, Philadelphia: Horace F. McCann – via Internet Archive (Pennsylvania Horticultural Society) .
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
- Philadelphia Inquirer (The) (June 2, 1903). "The Latest News In Real Estate – Purchase of Ground and New Houses Across the River Involve Outlay of $424,300 – New Residence at Chestnut Hill for Frederick W. Taylor" (estimated equivalent to $14,388,000 in 2023). Vol. 148, no. 153. p. 7. Retrieved August 26, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
- Philadelphia Inquirer (The) (June 24, 1903). "The Latest News In Real Estate – Revised Proposals" (re: Frederick W. Taylor house). Vol. 148, no. 175. p. 15. Retrieved August 26, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
- Philadelphia Inquirer (The) (August 11, 1903). "The Latest News In Real Estate – William J. Gruhler" (re: Ellis D. Williams house, York Road, Ogontz). Vol. 149, no. 42. p. 9. Retrieved August 26, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
- Philadelphia Inquirer (The) (July 10, 1903). "The Latest News In Real Estate – The Contract" (re: Frederick W. Taylor house). Vol. 149, no. 10. p. 14. Retrieved August 26, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
- Philadelphia Inquirer (The) (March 29, 1904). "The Latest News In Real Estate – Architect Mantle Fielding" (re: Frederick W. Taylor house). Vol. 150, no. 89. p. 5. Retrieved August 26, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
- List of Gardens of the Members of the Garden Club of America Open to Visit by Members (re: Frederick W. Taylor house). Millbrook, New York: Garden Club of America. 1922. p. 87 – via Internet Archive (Pennsylvania Horticultural Society ).
- Harshberger, John William, PhD (1869–1929) (1924). "Some Old Gardens of Pennsylvania". Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography (re: Frederick W. Taylor house). . 48 (4). University of Pennsylvania Press: 289–300.
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) ISSN 0031-4587; JSTOR 20086549; OCLC 41429417, 5543716989.
- Chestnut Hill Local; McNeely, George (December 5, 2019). "Boxly: A Botanical Legacy Survives in Chestnut Hill" (re: Frederick W. Taylor house). . Retrieved August 26, 2022. LCCN sn78000072; ISSN 0009-3394; OCLC 849807091 (all editions).
- Contosta, David Richard, PhD (born 1945) (1992). Surburb in the City – Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, 1850–1990 (re: Frederick W. Taylor house). Ohio State University Press. p. 122. Retrieved August 26, 2022 – via Google Books (limited preview).
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) LCCN 92-9820; ISBN 0-8142-0580-1, 978-0-8142-0580-8, ISBN 978-0-8142-0581-5, 0-8142-0581-X; OCLC 25509005 (all editions).
- Who’s Who in New Jersey; A Biographical Dictionary of Leading Living Men and Women of the States of New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland and West Virginia "Fielding, Mantle". Vol. 1. The A.N. Marquis Company. 1939. p. 278. Retrieved August 25, 2022 – via Internet Archive (Allen County Public Library) .
- Davis' Architects and Builders' Directory of Pennsylvania. James T. Davis Company, Limited. LCCN 99-1273; OCLC 166624317.
- American Art Annual (1924). "Who's Who in Architecture" – "Fielding, Mantle". 21. American Federation of Arts: 397 – via HathiTrust University of California Libraries .
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- Johnston, Frances Benjamin (1864–1952), photographer. Photo: "Boxley," Frederick Winslow Taylor house, Northwest corner of Seminole Avenue and St. Martin's Lane, Chestnut Hill. Boxwood path (c. 1910–1920). Retrieved August 25, 2022 – via Library of Congress.
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) LCCN 2008-675942.
- "Boxlely". Retrieved August 24, 2022 – via Smithsonian.
- Copley, Frank Barkley (1875–1941) (1923). Frederick W. Taylor, Father of Scientific Management. Chapter 3: "Boxley" (re: Frederick Winslow Taylor). Vol. 2 (of 2). Harper & Brothers. pp. 188–189. Retrieved August 25, 2022 – via HathiTrust (University of California Libraries) .
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) LCCN 23-17530; OCLC 807494 (all editions).
- "Alumni" ("The"). A History of the Germantown Academy. Philadelphia: S.H. Burbank & Co. (printer). 1910. pp. 273–321 – via Internet Archive (Ontario Institute for Studies in Education) . LCCN 29-5868; ; OCLC 36575172 (all editions).
- Wistar Morris' (Wistar Morris; 1815–1891) Green Hill Farm, Wynnewood, with 18 acres, was sold to Friends' Central School in 1925. The 1865 building structure, built as a home for Israel W. Morris, still stands. The Fielding structure (1893) was commissioned by Wistar Morris for his only daughter, Mary Hollingsworth Morris (1864–1891). The building was a copy of a castle in Scotland of granite and trimmed with fossiliferous limestone. Wistar's widow, Mary Harris (maiden 1836–1924) lived on the estate with her son-in-law, Rev. Charles Wood (1851–1936). Wistar Morris was a grandchild of American Revolutionary War soldier Samuel Morris (1734–1812). Indian Creek runs through the property.
- Philadelphia Inquirer (The). "Land for a Public Park" (re: Morris Park). Vol. 143, no. 150. p. 5 (col. 3, bottom). Retrieved August 23, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
- Philadelphia Neighborhoods; Hamer, Julian (July 11, 2014). "Morris Park: A Green Urban Playground for Nature Lovers" (re: Morris Park). Department of Journalism, Lew Klein College of Media and Communication, Temple University. Retrieved August 23, 2022.
- "Francis R. Strawbridge House, 5710 Wissahickon Avenue". Nomination of Historic Building, Structure, Site, or Object. Philadelphia Register of Historic Places, Philadelphia Historical Commission. April 7, 2015. Retrieved August 23, 2022.
- Bulletin (The); Platt, Frederick A. (born 1946) (1987). "Horace Trumbauer in Radnor" (PDF) (re: Horace Trumbauer). 4 (7). Wayne, Pennsylvania: Radnor Historical Society: 4–13.
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: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) OCLC 78677360.
- American Homes and Gardens; Chauncey, Charles (August 1909). "House of James E. Wheeler – Edgehill Road, New Haven, Connecticut". 6 (8). Munn & Company, Inc. (Charles Allen Munn): 330–332 – via Internet Archive (Smithsonian) .
{{cite journal}}
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(help) LCCN 06-22575; ISSN 1049-1104; OCLC 1479984 (all editions).
- Robert Early Strawbridge, Jr., Residence "Meadow Lodge," Bryn Mawr (p. 90), a Tudor Country House on 47 acres (1898) with gardens, tennis courts, orchard, 17th century English style, half-timbered architecture, carved wood paneling, archways, lead mullioned windows, fire places. The entrance is patterned after Windsor Castle's Great Hall. Thirty-two rooms.
- New York Times (The) (April 23, 1981). "Other Show Houses and Forthcoming Home Tours in the Area". Vol. 130, no. 44927 (Late City ed.). p. 6 (section C – Home Section). Retrieved August 19, 2022 – via Times Machine. (permalink – via TimesMachine.).
- James E. Wheeler House (James Everett Wheeler; 1870–1954), lawyer, 82 Edge Hill Road, New Haven, Connecticut (1902). Wheeler was a lawyer. His wife, Edith Pemberton Williams (1874–1953) was a 1st cousin of Fielding's wife, Amy Reeve Williams. It is a 21⁄2-story structure with stucco façade (1902).
- Terry Building, 207 South Jefferson Street (at Campbell, southeast corner), Roanoke, Virginia. A seven-story Italianesque stone and pressed-brick office building with a mansard roof, completed in 1892, became the tallest building in Roanoke. Peyton Leftwich Terry (1835–1898) was the building's namesake. The building was razed in 1926 and, in its place, in 1927, the Colonial National Bank building was erected.
- The Roanoke Diamond Jubilee (June 14–23, 1957) – Souvenir Program and History (PDF). p. 69 – via Virginia Room, Roanoke Public Library's Genealogy and Local History Department . OCLC 2173812 (all editions).
- Philadelphia Real Estate Record and Builders' Guide (The) (September 17, 1890). "M. Fielding, Architect ... ". 5 (37): 562 (col. 1) – via Internet Archive (Athenaeum of Philadelphia) .
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- Robeson Lea Perot (1872–1944), architect, once worked for Fielding.
- Morgan, John Hill (1941). "Mantle Fielding". Note Book. Walpole Society.
- Foust, Doreen L. (1985). Wyncote, Pennsylvania: the History, Development, Architecture and Preservation of a Victorian Philadelphia Suburb (MS thesis). pp. 94–95 (biography on pp. 136–137) – via Internet Archive (U. Penn) . OCLC 244926355.
Tennis
[edit]
- Slocum, Henry Warner, Jr. (1862–1949) (1890). Lawn Tennis in Our Own Country. A.G. Spalding & Bros. – via Google Books (Harvard) .
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U.S. National Lawn Tennis Association Championships. Newport
- Whittelsey, Joseph T[hompson] (1843–1903), ed. (1895). Wright & Ditson Officially Adopted Lawn Tennis Guide. Boston: Wright & Ditson (publisher) – via HathiTrust (NYPL) .
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: editors list (link)
- Orcutt, William Dana (1870–1953) (ed.). Official Lawn Tennis Bulletin. Cambridge: John Wilson & Son, University Press.
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- 1895: Vol. 2 – via Google Books (Princeton) . U.S. Women's Championships. Philadelphia Cricket Club, Wissahickon Heights.
- 1897: Vol. 4 – via Google Books (Princeton) . U.S. National Lawn Tennis Association Championships, Newport
- June 22–30, 1897.
4 (9). July 22, 1897: 138–139.
U.S. Women's Championships. Philadelphia Cricket Club, Wissahickon Heights.
Pennsylvania State Championships, Merion Cricket Club, Haverford.