Belmead Exhibit_Compiled3R.ai
Transcription
Belmead Exhibit_Compiled3R.ai
BUILDING ADAPTATION Re-authoring Identity over Time A tradition of re-purposing buildings and landscape features has pervaded the history of Belmead. The Drexel sisters appropriated the plantation of one of the largest slaveholders in the South for two schools for African Americans, places of education and advancement. Belmead was converted for use as the St. Emma Industrial and Agricultural College, and the Cocke mansion became the administration building and hub of the new school. To make it more serviceable, an addition on the west side of the house replaced the original kitchen wing. The reuse of materials and even entire buildings was a common practice for school-era construction. Plantation-era buildings were often reused, moved, renovated and expanded to fit the needs of the school, as well as for symbolic purposes. A powerful physical statement of the schools’ mission for African-American education was achieved through re-aligning a picturesque board-and-batten slave quarter to face the academic quadrangle and reusing it as early dormitory space. The 1840s stone sawmill is another outstanding example of adaptation in the school era. The mill was appropriated and expanded with two new floors above and a large frame addition at the side. The seamless addition of stories with similar materials exemplifies the site’s themes of local materials, economy and permanence. Later, in the post-World War II era, the schools recycled military Quonset huts as gymnasiums, classroom space and for social events. Sawmill, late 19th Century Sawmill with expansion, 1913 Many of the outbuildings have fallen into disrepair since the schools closed, but efforts are underway to continue the tradition of adaptation by finding new uses for remaining structures in Belmead’s landscape. The Belmead Riding Club, established by the Catlett family, has kept many of the old outbuildings in working order since the early 1990s. The club has reused remaining structures for their barns, quarantine stable and office spaces. Recent renovation of the stable revealed beautiful pressed tin ceilings in several of the stalls. The tin matches material believed to have been reclaimed from the Belmead mansion. In maintaining and renovating the stable today, the riding club is participating in a long history of adaptive reuse on the Belmead property. The granary, the oldest building on site, underwent the first phase of a substantial stabilization and restoration program in 2008. The long-term plan for the Granary includes the establishment of an eco-spirituality center. The landscape‘s history of reuse continues through the extensive farming of a preserved land rich in natural resources. Many of the old paths and roads have been brought back to life as horse trails. Hardwoods planted by Cocke, envisioning generations of sustainable forestry, still stand and grow on the property. Periodic timber harvests help sustain and support the current residents, the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament. VOCATIONS AT ST. EMMA Greatest Endeavors: Scientific Agriculture & Skilled Mechanics In the plantation era, the Belmead slave community represented a broad range of skilled and unskilled work including agricultural field hands, carpenters, stone masons, a wheelwright, shepherds, and other livestock specialists, cooks, and domestic servants. Agriculture and the trades continued to play a prominent role in the school-era curriculum. The Morrells believed that African Americans would achieve progress through skilled labor instead of academic pursuits. This notion of uplift was a common if controversial educational theory of the times, propounded by Booker T. Washington at Tuskegee Institute in Alabama. In the process of learning skills, the students contributed to the operation of their own school, served the surrounding community, and shipped wagons they manufactured throughout the South. While the agricultural techniques taught at the school were the latest technology, the departments changed little over time. The agricultural department had instructors knowledgeable in the management of the dairy, garden, piggery, poultry, animal husbandry, and farm crops. The trade school departments also taught state of the art skills. In contrast to agriculture, the trades offerings changed dramatically over the school era, reflecting technological changes in the wider world. Some trades were present in various fashions throughout the school era, including masonry, tailoring, carpentering, and blacksmithing. Others were introduced or retired in response to the market. The automobile rendered carriage and wagon building and harness making obsolete, for example, but the schools added automobile mechanics to its list of trade skills offered. Portion of Cocke’s 1857 Slave Inventory, indicating the slaves’ names, age, occupation, and value. Industrial Class, 1913. BELMEAD ACADEMICS Education, Work, and Gender During the School-Era The different experiences of students at the two schools are best understood in the gendered differences in language of the schools’ curriculum. While the boys at St. Emma were expected to become “leaders in military and civilian life,” St. Francis’ young ladies were expected to maintain a Christian home, being trained primarily in academics and domestic skills. The boys were able to participate in both military and industrial activities, preparing them for a life of leadership and discipline within their respective communities. The curriculum at St. Francis varied throughout the years, including classes in domestic science, nursing, teacher training, music, sewing, and marketing. Within the walls of both the school and the chapel, St. Francis girls were trained to use the “hand as well as the heart and mind [to] exert a widespread influence for good upon their race and people.” The founders of St. Emma, the Morrells, ascribed to the Tuskegee mission that “agriculture is the best hope for the Negro,” initially favoring vocational education over academic subjects. Over the years academics grew in importance as the school shifted towards training students for enrollment in colleges and in military academies. St. Francis classroom, 1920s St. Francis-St. Emma combined dance, 1960s Cheerleaders, mid-20th century St. Francis’ architecture mirrored contemporary society’s requirements for surveillance and domesticity within a female educational environment. The school building provided almost all necessary living and learning spaces for the girls attending St. Francis. The building housed classrooms, parlors, and dining rooms, but also dormitory rooms for both the students and Sisters in charge of teaching. In contrast, the St. Emma curriculum allowed the boys opportunities to move around the property, working the land, constructing school buildings, manufacturing at the trade school, and other projects. The boys’ campus featured separate spaces and buildings for living and learning, scattered across the landscape. St. Francis de Sales shared social activities with St. Emma’s Military Academy. In 1925, the St. Francis de Sales School was accredited by the Commonwealth of Virginia and continued to enrich the lives of young African American women until 1970, when it was permanently closed. THE SPIRIT OF PLACE Ministry Traced Through Time at Belmead Entrance to Chapel at St. Francis de Sales School Community Worship at St. Emma Spirituality is an essential part to the Belmead narrative. St. Francis was administered by the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament while several religious and lay orders administered St. Emma. The two schools give the Belmead landscape a spiritual dimension that makes them significant expressions of Catholic faith and pedagogical traditions. The religious pedagogies of the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament were reflected in Belmead’s landscape. Architectural expressions of Catholic symbolism are seen explicitly on the exterior and interior of St. Francis de Sales, as the school was intended “to make the atmosphere of the school like that of a truly Christian home.” The attached chapel was integral to the daily lives of the students attending St. Francis. Although the school was ecumenical, from sunrise at 5:30 AM when morning prayers and Mass was held, till sunset when evening prayers were recited, Catholic spirituality and belief were integral to the students’ educational experience. Today FrancisEmma, Inc., a nonprofit organization under the sponsorship of the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament, recognizes Belmead as a sacred and holy space while promoting an ethic of ecojustice as well as social justice with programs tailored to “ecological, historical, cultural, literary, and educational pursuits that connect knowledge and experience through interaction with the natural world.” The sisters who currently live on the Belmead property describe these sets of oak trees as “the Sisters” and “the Brothers,” reflecting the religious history of the schools that once operated on the site. The Sisters and Brothers trees, located in the agriculture fields south of Belmead mansion, serve as a reminder of the narrative of the religious and educational mission of this property. Cornerstone of St. Francis de Sales School. ERASING AN ERA Claver Hall Morrell Hall Colby Hall St. Edward’s Belmead 1960s aerial of quad Demolition of Colby Hall, 1974 Water Tower and St. Edward’s Chapel 1974 Peter Claver Hall, c. 1930 Postcard Peter Claver Hall, 1974 Belmead 2010 aerial of quad 2010 Water Tower and St. Edward’s Chapel c.1930 Demolition, Decline and the Future of the Belmead Property St. Emma Parade Grounds, 2010. Belmead, with school era addition, is seen on the far right. St. Francis Tower Collapse, 2010 2010 Design Charrette Future In the late 1960s and early 1970s, student enrollment at St. Emma and St. Francis declined sharply. Educational opportunities for African American had slowly improved throughout the United States and between 1969 and 1972 the number of students at St. Emma fell from 340 to 93. The last class graduated from St. Emma in 1972. St. Francis had been closed since 1970. Concern over maintenance costs and liability led the owners of Belmead to demolish all but a handful of the buildings - a process that took 8 months. Reflecting preservation priorities of the era, the Belmead mansion - nominated to the National Register of Historic Places just five years prior - was preserved, and now stands alone at the edge of the once bustling academic quadrangle. Efforts are now underway to celebrate the history of this place and to envision its future. In 2010, people from the University of Virginia, the National Trust for Historic Preservation, Preservation Virginia, the Virginia Department of Historic Resources joined other preservation experts and the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament in a weekend-long design charrette on the future of Belmead, and secured anonymous funds for the emergency stabilization of St. Francis. While much work remains, the rich layered history of Belmead provides a strong foundation from which to renew this site. THE CHOICEST LAND Preserving Past, Present and Future: Belmead Land Conservation The coming generations will have entailed upon it a scarcity of wood & timber only to be remedied by long years of careful & laborious cultivation and preservation of the forest itself. - Philip St. George Cocke Timber School Era Timber Production “Here the student has the opportunity to learn the processes by which the tree, standing in the woods, is felled, sawn, stacked, kiln dried or seasoned.” Agricultural School Prospectus, pre-WWI Ja mes Rive r Agriculture Belmead St. Francis Crop Rotation Chart and Map, Philip St. George Cocke “Belmead contains...340 acres of the choicest James River flatland.” Philip St. George Cocke, 1854 Deep Creek Water and Stone 1913 Deep Creek Dam Conservation Easement Boundary “Much of the wheat and corn raised on the farm is ground in the mill. The machinery is modern... operated by both steam and water power.” Agricultural School Prospectus, pre-WWI Though the modern history of Belmead has been one of decline and disuse, recent activities have sought to renew its history. Most prominently, in December of 2006 the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament placed a conservation easement on 1,099 acres of the 2,265 acre Belmead property. The easement, though it does not directly protect the historic, built fabric of the site, does protect 465 acres devoted to crop and food production, 589 acres of managed forests and over 600 acres of sensitive wetlands and riparian corridors. Under the terms of the conservation easement these areas are protected from subdivision and require specific management and care through the creation of Stewardship Plans. These plans, designed to protect the land from resource depletion, would have been lauded by Philip St. George Cocke, who had meticulously managed his plantation and lamented in 1854 that “the present generation will scarcely repair the waste & injury inflicted upon the soil by previous bad management and tillage.” Resource management is as much a part of the history of Belmead as the buildings. Not only as the context for the placement of the Belmead mansion, or for landscape preservation, but as part of the vital story of production, extraction and self-sufficiency that permeates the uses of this site from the plantation era, through the school era, and into more recent times. In many ways, the conservation easement is the bridge between past and future in this property. It protects, according to the Sisters, “a story traced through time.” Today, a new story is emerging.