Misplaced McIntire Pieces?

My title is a bit provocative: I am sure art historians know where the various extant pieces of Samuel McIntire’s urns, swags, mantles, etc.. wound up after they were removed from structures that were burning or razed or mistakenly modernized. But I don’t. A case in point is the previous embellishment of the former stable of the John Robinson House on Summer Street. Just this past week I had a coincidental “happening” with this structure. I happened to run across an article in the March 1912 edition of Country Life in America about John Robinson’s garden (he was a famous horticulturist, author, and garden designer) entitled “A Little Garden in Old Salem” which features several photographs, including one of his stable, embellished with McIntire panels and urns taken from a Derby coach house and the South Church which had burned down nine years before. Then two days later, I happened to meet the charming artist who presently lives in the stable, which was converted to a residence many years ago (and separated from the Robinson House). As her house is no longer embellished with swags and urns, I asked her where they went. According to her sources (the stable’s previous owners, and the man who moved her into it), there was a fire, during which people in the neighborhood “saved” the McIntire pieces, but no one is quite sure where they all ended up. I confirmed the fire–which happened in 1950, just one year after the stable had been converted into a garage–but my photographic evidence dates from before this time, and after: obviously we have a present-day building which is quite transformed, as well as swag-less and urn-less.

McIntire Embellished Stable in Salem 1912

Robinson Stable HABS 2 LC

McIntire Collage

Robinson Stable HABS 3 West Elevation LC

Robinson Stable HABS LC

Summer Street Stable Salem

Photographs of the Robinson Stable/House over the years: from “A Little Garden in Old Salem” by Wilhelm Miller (photograph by Arthur G. Eldredge), Country Life in America volume 21 (1911-12): all outfitted with McIntire panels and urns; from the HABS inventory at the Library of Congress, 1940, with panels and no urns but drawings of all ornamentation; today–rebuilt after the 1950 fire with no ornamentation.

Regardless of the whereabouts of the McIntire elements, the 1912 and 1940 examinations of the Robinson stable are interesting comparisons of relative appreciation for the famed architect and woodcarver of Salem: the earlier article scarcely mentions him while the HABS report is all about him! But ultimately one wonders how all that ornamentation got on the stable and off it: I am imagining frenzied pilfering/saving, both on the night of the burning of the South Church next door and the stable 47 years later. And where are all these elements now? I’m just not sure. The Peabody Essex Museum has urns from the William Orne House (demolished 1882) in their collection, and The Visitor’s Guide (s) to Salem published by its predecessor, the Essex Institute, in 1908 and 1916 indicate that urns from the South Church as well as other architectural elements are among its collection. South Church elements are also featured in Volume 13 of the pictorial Pageant of America series, published for the nation’s sesquicentennial. Are these the same urns taken off the stable for the photo shoot–or others rescued on that terrible night in 1903? And where are all those swag and rosette panels that we see affixed to the stable in 1912 and 1940? What is missing and what is accounted for? As I write this I’m looking down Chestnut Street and thinking about all those basements–but sadly, there are only Victorian doors and shutters in my own, as well as lots of late twentieth-century junk.

McIntire Doorhead South Church

McIntire Urns South Church NYPL

South Church Details PEM

 McIntire doorhead and urns from the South Church, destroyed by fire in 1903, from Volume 13 of the Pageant of America Series: The American Spirit of Architecture by Talbot Faulkner Hamlin (1926), New York Public Library Digital Collections. Details of the South Church spire from the Peabody Essex Museum’s archived microsite for its exhibition Samuel McIntire: Carving an American Style.

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10 responses to “Misplaced McIntire Pieces?

  • Andy Perrin

    http://mobile.nytimes.com/2007/11/09/arts/design/09anti.html

    “McIntire’s work has been avidly collected in the Boston area since the late 1800s. By the 1920s many McIntire houses in Salem had been stripped of their mantels and woodwork. These were then sold to museums, dealers or major Americana collectors like Henry Francis du Pont, Francis P. Garvan and Maxim Karolik.”

    Hmmmm.

  • Matt

    Excellent post. Many of them are out there, I am sure. Many may not even know they have them. Reminds me of a story about some missing HH mirrors. I think one was found (and returned) in a house the DuFours bought, and I thought I saw another hanging in the house at the corner of Anderson and Essex that just changed hands.

    • daseger

      I know–I remember seeing that mirror on Flint: someone just took it home for safekeeping I guess and there it remained many years later! Nice of the DuFours to return it. Essex and Anderson???

  • Jessica Herbert

    Donna,

    Wasn’t this the building/carriage house which Sam Pole initiated into the Salem “Carriage House Ordinance” which he “created” in the late 1970’s +/- to save these structures by allowing them to be converted into residences?

    R/Jessica

    Cell: 978-479-9325

  • pat ayer

    You should check out Hillary Clintons home in Chapaqua !!!!!!!!!!

  • Katherine Greenough

    I’m glad I’m not the only one who has been curious as to whether anything was saved from the 1903 fire at the South Church. I had hoped PEM had most of these decorative elements, but it doesn’t sound like that’s the case, unfortunately. Another great article, Donna and now you have a cadre of people on the lookout for these items! — Kathy Greenough

  • Jane Griswold Radocchia

    Great post – I run across stuff obviously taken from a house quite often. I even own some! I’ve saved it, stored in it my barn, but if I don’t label it and don’t use it, no one will ever know why I bothered, where it came from.

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