Annual Meeting and PHW’s Preservation Awards

PHW will kick off our 51st year with the Annual Meeting on Sunday, June 28 at the Winchester Little Theatre. A large part of what we look forward to celebrating at Annual Meeting, aside from the food and friends, is seeing the preservation projects that have happened around Winchester over the past year.

The awards were started by PHW in 1980 as preservation instead of demolition started to become the norm. The awards were intended to encourage the often lonely and unrecognized efforts of local preservationists. Initially, all projects, whether building restorations, leadership, or scholarly research, were awarded a certificate of merit.

In 1986, the Lucille Lozier Award, Ben Belchic Award, and Carroll H. Henkel Award were added to the merit awards to recognize specific preservation projects. As longtime PHW members or readers of the 50th Anniversary blog series may know, these three awards were named in honor of founding members of PHW who had passed away by this point in time. The Henkel award, named for PHW’s first president, honors individuals who demonstrate outstanding leadership for historic preservation in the Winchester-Frederick County area. The Lozier award, named for PHW’s president during the final year of the struggle to save the Conrad House, is awarded to a renovation of a significant structure retaining 75% of the historic architectural fabric. The Belchic award, named for PHW’s first resident historian, recognizes a significant contribution to understanding Winchester’s history through written texts, such as books, maps, National Register nominations, and guided tours.

In 1988, the Elsie Rosenberger Award was added to the roster to recognize volunteerism with PHW. This award also is the only one to date which is recognized with an engraving of the volunteers’ names on a silver octagonal platter which remains on display year-round at the PHW office.

Two more awards were added in the 1990s. The first, the Katherine G. Rockwood Revolving Fund Award, was initiated in 1996. Named for the mastermind behind many of PHW’s projects of the 1970s and early 1980s, including the 1976 Historic District survey and the Limestone, Sycamores, & Architecture book, this award is only eligible to the approximately 80 properties PHW has purchased through the Revolving Fund. Until this time, it had been standard not to recognize the work put into the Revolving Fund properties as a quality restoration was part of the agreement to purchase the property. Added the next year was the Patron Award, recognizing outstanding supporters of the goals and programs of PHW. As it usually encompasses a financial component, it is likely to recognize sponsors or large donors to the organization.

The newest award is the Lifetime Achievement, which came to be in 2009. E. E Bayliss, Jr., who had long been PHW’s go-to realtor for the Revolving Fund, had passed away shortly before the Annual Meeting and no particular award seemed to fit the work he had done for PHW. After brainstorming, we decided the best recognition would be a Lifetime Achievement to recognize a person who has worked for the goals and programs of PHW over many years. Whereas a Henkel Award may recognize a short term, high-impact project, Lifetime Achievements are a recognition of “slow and steady” work over the long-term. The award is often presented posthumously to recognize a PHW supporter who may otherwise be unrecognized despite long years of preservation work.

Ten more names will join the list of PHW Preservation Award winners this Sunday, and a new recognition category will be presented as well. The winners won’t be publicly released until following the meeting, but you can review the past winners from 1980-2014 at PHW’s site.

We hope to see you Sunday as these names become inscribed in PHW’s history!

Friday Photos: A Hodgepodge of Historic Winchester

This week, we bring you an assortment of views around Winchester, with a special emphasis on late Victorian era architectural details. If you like looking at cornices, you will love the Italianate style details and buildings album.

New additions have also been made to the following albums:

Holiday House Tour 2009: Aglow on Clifford Street

Clifford Street

Amherst Street

Cecil Street

Floral details and spindlework

Mark your calendars: PHW’s 51st Annual Meeting on June 28th

51st Annual Meeting

Join PHW as we celebrate another year of historic preservation in Winchester. The business portion of the meeting features an overview of the past year, election of board members, and presentation of the 2015 Preservation Awards. The Winchester Little Theatre team will then bring you up to date on the work and progress at the Little Theatre. Afterwards, stay for an afternoon of socializing, refreshments, and building tours. WLT will have slates for sale, which can be purchased for $10 each and signed. Much like other projects which used engraved bricks for sidewalks to raise funds, your signed slates will be used on the actual roof at the Pennsylvania Freight Station.

Date: Sunday, June 28
Time: 2:00 PM
Location: The Winchester Little Theatre, 315 W. Boscawen St.
Cost: The event is free for current PHW members and invited guests. Need to join or renew your membership? Visit our membership page for more information.

We Need Your Feedback: PHW Products

PHW would like to launch a line of products to raise awareness of Winchester, Virginia’s rich architectural heritage. Please take a few moments to complete this survey and help PHW determine whether this idea has popular demand and, if so, give a direction for the most desired items and subjects. The survey is seven questions in length and should only take a few moments of your time.

Click here to start the survey.

A printed version of this survey will also be included with the mailed PHW Annual Meeting invitations. Please feel free to share this survey with your friends who may be interested in PHW products, too.

Thank you for your help!

The Barber Houses of Winchester, Virginia

The Gables

Following the presentation on Saturday, May 16, Sandra Bosley received a question about the exuberant Queen Anne style house on the corner of Washington and Boscawen Streets. It, along with the other late Victorian homes on that block, was owned by the Baker family, of Baker & Co. wholesale grocery fame. The so-called “palatial” residence was built by William H. Baker, the chocolate magnate of the family.

The house on the corner, known as The Gables, is not only one of Winchester’s most visibly ostentatious dwellings, but one of the designs produced by Knoxville, Tennessee-based architect George F. Barber.

Chimney Detail Barber was a self-taught architect, learning from books like George Palliser’s American Cottage Homes and technical books published by A.J. Bicknell and Company. Barber published his first catalog consisting of fourteen designs in 1887 or 1888. The second edition featuring 59 designs was published in 1890, and his mail order architecture business boomed. Most of his plans were late Victorian confections with distinctive tower, porch, and chimney flourishes, but toward the end of his career, he produced a handful of Colonial Revival and transitional Queen Anne/Colonial Revival style designs as well.(1)

Although Barber phased out his catalog business in 1908, his work had become so widespread as to have representative buildings in all 50 states. Winchester can boast of at least five extant Barber designed houses and two known demolished designs. The Gables is the most famous example, but the known Winchester Barber designed houses are:

As noted by Michael Alcorn during his research trip to Winchester in 1998, it seems likely one person would order a George F. Barber catalog and then pass it on to a friend, so that multiple Barber houses appear in a “cluster.” As Queen Anne houses are not typically thought of when considering potential mail order houses, Barber designs are easily overlooked by enthusiasts of other mail order homes, like Sears, Aladdin, Montgomery Ward, and many more. Peruse more Barber designs at the Knox County Public Library. You just might recognize the design of another local Barber house!

An Architectural Treasure Hunt at Handley Library

How sharp is your eye for architectural detail? You can test yourself with three architectural treasure hunts produced in celebration of National Preservation Month 2015. The three treasure hunts feature architectural details from the Handley Library at 100 West Piccadilly Street in Winchester, Virginia. The details can be found on its three street-side faces (Piccadilly, Braddock, and Fairfax). Look up, down, and all around to spot the details!

Unlike past architectural treasure hunts, there are often multiple places where the same details can be found. This treasure hunt is just for fun – no prizes involved – but it may inspire you to examine details you’ve never seen before.

Can You Find It at Handley Library? (3 sheets, PDF, 3.5 MB)

Coming This Saturday: See! Save! Celebrate! and Other Downtown Events

The big day, May 16, is almost here! Start your day off with a trip to Fort Loudoun at 419 N. Loudoun St. for Fort Loudoun Day (10 a.m. – 1 p.m.). Tours of the grounds, led by historian Norman Baker, begin in half hour intervals. At 11:30 a.m. Mr. Raleigh Boaze will speak on General Braddock’s Failed Attempt to Capture Fort Duquesne, to be followed at noon by the flag raising. Stop by to see members of The Department of Geographers, Washington’s Rev. War army’s staff surveyors, and Larry Johnston “Liberty Man.” Learn more about the French and Indian War Foundation and Fort Loudoun at www.fiwf.org .

Kidzfest returns for the second year on the Winchester Old Town Mall with activities all day long. The family-focused event features musical performances along with interactive activities for children of all ages. Free activities and engaging exhibits will line the walking mall. Learn more about Kidzfest and see a schedule of events at oldtownwinchesterva.com.

Last but not least is PHW and Friends of the Handley Regional Library’s joint See! Save! Celebrate! National Preservation Month event. Two concurrent programs, one for children and one for adults, will begin at 2:00 p.m. Sandra Bosley, Executive Assistant for Preservation of Historic Winchester, will give an illustrated talk for adults on the businesses and buildings associated with the city’s railroad history. Also at 2:00 p.m., there will be a separate program for children in grades two through five led by Youth Services librarian Jennifer Sutter. The program will feature train stories, train songs, a model train, and a chance for youngsters to learn about Winchester’s railroad history and about railroad crossing safety.

It will be a full day, rain or shine, so bring the family and head downtown. We’ll see you there!

Coming Tonight: “Slow Train to Yesterday” Documentary Showing

The first of the two joint programs put together by PHW and the Friends of Handley Library in celebration of National Preservation Month is almost here. Tonight, May 13, we invite you to come to the auditorium at Handley Library, 100 West Piccadilly Street, for a screening of the award-winning WVPT documentary “Slow Train to Yesterday: Memories of the Railroad in the Blue Ridge Mountains.”

The documentary includes residents and railroad employees who describe the important role the railroad had in their lives as it connected mountain communities to the Shenandoah Valley. The film will be preceded by an introduction by Mason Cooper, a Stephens City resident and member of the Winchester Chapter of the National Railway Historical Society.

The event begins at 6:30 PM and is free and open to the public. The documentary running time is just under one hour.

Read more online at the Winchester Star in the article by Stephen Nielsen (login required).

Friday Photos Look at Newspaper Ads

Excursions to the Shenandoah Valley

Take a trip back in time with this sampling of advertising from the 1870s to the early 1900s to whet your appetite for PHW and Handley Regional Library’s National Preservation Month activities next week.

PHW uncovered a selection of interesting vintage Winchester advertisements during the research and preparation for the Saturday, May 16 program. Some are amusing, some are informational. Some businesses are still remembered today, but perhaps many more have been forgotten. Even the goods sold run the gamut from the expected homemade whiskey to the surprising imported Italian marble.

See what some of Winchester’s industries were making and selling over one hundred years ago. View the album on Flicker!