The Wavnesville Mountaineer SECOND SECTION tood Hall, Historic Raleigh Home, Being Restored I. County Bears Bant t,. Name Of State Treas. der ll i HQ ! ion k Stearns j Home in j ith Days ol ood i i. me lolloping L en Hi' l'agt" ! t. lor reurodut lourtcsy The i It is observer Ll will be of "'- W. since nay j home ol Lm tins counij I7..H hv the Mis- mnk marme links passers-by; of Southern liv-i fcminder, lor tne fcofless and uu j ,tral ghosts are. man voices. i historic Hay-, rnme to sucn ani itral gtots will laved al Hay- ild has returned Lns white house he and she plans ie quaint charm Lhen her great- Haywood, was iigements will be to ureserve inc Vial to her moth- who gathered front yard was wle, daughter of and Mrs. Daniel iday she is Mrs. tis. Mrs. Fowle od, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. wanted a house lularlv in the vi- jiurch, as she was tchurch, and her John, was a ves- er warden. Also, the site for the fleams have been jeigh and Pine is! 30 years, and come to Haleigh tier searching a suitable home, 13 I ; ..... I f-1 " iii.f immJU Yt I iW L '; (i s - . ? ..- j . . - - J-.'-.. .:.,.t&A.ii .,.,,. .-, - . - ... . Mfct - HAYVVOOD HALL at 211 New Bern Avenue was built in 1792 by John Haywood, and is notable for its double-dock entrance porch of classic ti-L I IV 1 -.,1 M i- U'-.lt,,.. TVT Chirnc r.l?n in nvl(il'( it ttll'llllfTh i' 1 1 I'll i S 1 1 i 11 PS -'lllll I t '( '( 1 111 I i t i I) II i 11 i U tllC tDC UlaCC it design. The present owners, Mr. and Mrs. Walter M. Stearns, plan to restore was when Mrs. Stearns' great-grandfather. John Haywood, was master furnishings. "1 want very much to preserve the original construction of the house," Mrs. Stearns said, "and I wantvto furnish and decorate il much as it was when my great 'of the Krenoji. It was purchased when Fabius Haywood was mar ried, and reflected the gay gath erings in his home at the corner of Fayetteville and Morgan streets where the State Library is now r i m ft i w John Haywood Was State Treasurer 40 Years and First Mayor Of Raleigh John Haywood, for whom Hay wood county was named served for 40 vears as treasurer for the state of North Carolina until his death in 1827. Ho held a number of other pub lit offices, being the first mayor of Kaleigh In 1792 he built Haywood Hall at 211 New Bern Avenue in the capital city; the restoration of which is now being carried out by his great-granddaughter. Horn in Kdgecombe county Feb 23, 17S5, Haywood look a leading part in the early growth of Ins state, and was one of the must popular men of his day. He was clerk for provisional congresses and ( ' I .O i Si F. ( 'hi ne-e vases on the living room nianlel general assemblies dining the 11. i- .,l ,,nM .n.iis nl magnolia from a tree imported horn I I l.i olutionarv War. and in 17H7 unanimously elected stale treasur er. lie was a member of the lirvl board of trustees for the University of North Carolina, serving on the committee which selected its silt grows in I i : i el I lay ' ood. eldi -I v..iil at Havvfond Ha ,ui ol John Haywood and I'he noiirait is Or raiull'at her ol Ii : . 'to at Cli, 1 1 mil I Ha-. Dunn.: ll Colli i i u- town and another prominent John ll.iyv.ood .o.mI unc naiiKil in who served as jud::e on the -un i Supreme Court before nuiv.n sime era there was Tennessee. to Grandfather lived here.'' Along Later, it was taken to Governor furnishing lines, Mrs. Stearns was Fowle s house, a large Colonial very fortunate, for in her Sche- house on the site of the Sir Walter o,."i .riv N v home she had manv hotel. When he was elected gov- pieees which had come from the ei nor. the mirror went to the man home of Mr. Stearns' great-grand-1 sion with the Fowles. When Gov father from Massachusetts. Also, lei nor Fowle died, it was shipped she has been able to obtain a few lo Chicago, then lo Atlanta to Mr. of (he Haywood pieces such as and Mrs. Stearns, and it went with whatnots, a hatraek and a book-jlhem to Pittsfield, Mass., and to case ! Schenectady. Finally, the mueh- The visitor is impressed with' travelled mirror has come back to the grace with which the New Eng-, its original home land furniture fits its setting be low the Mason-Dixon line. It seems always to have been in the rooms of Haywood Hall, and the rooms lack the stiff, museum-like atmosphere which is so often the case when restorations' are at tempted "We haven't had any over whelming problems in connection with doing the house over," Mrs. Stearns said. "The plumbing is rather bad, however, and we have had to reinforce ceilings on the second floor." - There are no closets, hut there A.iai.,,, i,,..,f,. immrtiiD rp ;eviijl laree armoires an- yuwnt m auij mi nni - " something of the owners' tastes to tlque pieces which are larger the house, there is a pair of amre than many apartment closets. the original kitchen is a suitable home, ""- v i-- ouii.i,t - " . " . , 4K Ichased Havwood the living room mantel, along with; 20 feet from the house, part of the W J .. i i . . l- I 1 1, n...li Koo honn nnVPftfn Udlh jiieii una wvvii " into a roomy, red and white kitch en, modern version. The remain ing Dortion of the lattice-work porch will become an out-door liv ing room. The house was two years in the building and this is understand able when one looks at the hand- ts placed on the 'antique Staffordshire dogs. In the Haywood Bridg- ierited it from his ywood. jBtearns were pri & in establishing imselves, but the ijto one of historic dining room on the buffet there are two pineapple-shaped mahog any knife-boxes, brought from England. In the living room there is a tall, floor-length mirror. The mir- rnr ic CTnlrl-f ratnpd and slender. the house and its graceful in a fashion reminiscent iijjfe " j tm- M a 1 H m IIP I 1 B m M : ) 111 I m W II I K1 r 1 : All 1 a- 11 1 i7i 1 m:. 1 4 mi . i i ll Vi! MI I ' 4 I liif a 1 Huffo : C4 dt k 1 t m wtms w if' Hit tni I B Mm a y m 1 a I . ti3Ll:: fen 1 . 1 . Kir' u imum 'j :M : f; : ' : III 5 t I -li11 At 1 ANTIQUE chest which belonged lo Mr. Slearns" family stands in the hallway. Note the panelled wainscoting which prevails in rooms on the first and second floors, and is filled wilh clav in back for warmth and to reduce fire hazard. carved Chinese Chippendale wood- was a fairly larg, work and the hand-hewn timbers ; Little Alary and held together by wooden pegs or floated boxes in Vinnri-U'l-nllPllt nails I WaUCd. 100 pool of water, her playmates the pool and i SJ? -end the ZwSbed rtiioi. ""uuwrK ana tne rea-umea appie ihuovc; -.-- -- ... which pucn reicnaH . j TT.ii m u miv t spn stairs to tne tuira noor wmtu naywuua Llail, x u ui "v Most of ttie rooms have panelled wainscoting for about four feet from the floor, and the space back of this panelling is filled with clay. Mr. Stearns said this was probably done to decrease the fire haazrd and give additional warmth, but it really presenled a problem when it came to electrical wiring and plumbing, he added. Gardening is Mrs. Stearns' hob by, and she plans to have a rose garden at Haywood Hall. She has begun planting grass and a few varieties of flowers, and there will be a garden of flowering shrubs to thp left of the house, which will j provide berries for the birds in the fall. Both Mr. and Mrs. Stearns are bird enthusiasts, and already there are numerous feed ing stations on the grounds. When Mrs. Stearns was little Mary Haywood Fowle. Centennial public school was where the Me morial auditorium is today. The business district ended wilh the old Yarborough hotel, which stood where Hudson-Belk is. and at the lower end of Fayetteville street were Colonial-type houses. When the building of the pres ent Governor's Mansion was aban doned for lack of funds. Governor Fowle moved in anyway, and asked the General Assembly for an ap propriation of $5,000 to finish it. He received $2,500. The work continued with convict i labdr and bricks and mortar were J made in the basement where there , Since Mr. and Mrs. Stearns have returned to Haywood Hall, she says there has been wide interest among neighbors and townspeople in their attempts to restore and preserve I he place; and she and Mr. Stearns feel thai they have truly found the home for which they were looking. CALF VISITS MOVIE HARTFORD OTV. lnd. UP "at ions of a local theater were ilartled to find tha; they were not the only ones viewing the movies. Prancing down Ihe aisle was a calf which had jumpei; out of a passing truck. in ft t s ".W&i.' 'Of iik." , ""1J.- m mem RARE English mahogany kiuli l'hyfe. 4 in nincapp V Art iape adorn the bulTe!. The dmnu table I- TWIN CITY SERVICE STATION Phone G9 Below the LcFaine Hotel WHY TAKE A CHANCE of having1 an accident with broken or defective class Let us replace your broken glass with new, highly polished glass. 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