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View PDF - Cincinnati History Library and Archives
The Baum-Taft House Spring 1988 The Baum-Taft House: A Historiography Jaync Merkel The Taft Museum seems to be a perfectly exist, and early documentary evidence is fragmentary. The restored residence from the beginning of the nineteenth first statements made about the house in print, from the century, but it is, in fact, a building that has been enlarged, 183 o's, mention the building itself only in passing. Not until altered, restored, and redefined over a period of 150 years to the beginning of the twentieth century did historians menserve a series of residential and institutional purposes. Simi- tion its architecture. Soon after that interest centered on the larly the history of the Baum-Taft house—or any version of architect who designed it, even though today it appears it—seems to describe something fixed and certain, but the likely that the original house was the work of a carpenterstudy of its history reveals a series of assertions, assumptions, builder and that a number of architects, decorators, craftsstories, and myths uncovered or invented to explain the men, and other professionals were involved in its design, building that the authors saw or thought they saw. The remodeling, additions, and renovation over the years. historiography of the Baum-Taft residence reveals as much The entry on the Baum-Taft house in G.E. about the writing of architectural history and commentary Kidder Smith's The Architecture ofthe United States, one of the in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries as the fabric of the most reputable guides to American architecture, typifies the house does about the building practices during that time.1 commentary made during most of this century: No original drawings or plans of the house The Taft Museum was built as the residence of Martin Baum, Jayne Merkel is an art historian who works as architecture critic of the Cincinnati Enquirer and WGUC. She also writes regularly for Art in America, Inland Architect, and Artforum. Front (west) elevation of the Baum-Taft house (Taft Museum), Cincinnati, Ohio. Photo by Jeff Friedman, Cincinnati, Ohio. The Baum-Taft house is one of the finest examples of Federal architecture in the state of Ohio. Queen City Heritage 34 with James Hoban of Washington fame thought by some to be its inhabitants and consists almost entirely of literary evidence: architect or at least a consultant. The house also recalls Jeffersonian letters, deeds, articles, papers, and word of mouth. Hardly principles ofproportion. (Some attribute the house to Latrobe butanyone actually looked at the building or studied old maps, this is not borne out by Hamlin.)... Its architectural ambitions drawings, and photographs. Most of the researchers were attain elegance, with two-story central block and lower wings atnot art or architectural historians by training, but even those either side, and an unusual play ofoval lights in the central section. who were did not conduct a thorough visual analysis—research A positively scaled, well-projected Tuscan portico marks the entry, with a crow bar, literally digging into the walls and under the giving a Greek Revival touch to the Federal Style building. The floors — that Richard Cote, Curator of the White House of entire house is of white-painted wood.2 the Confederacy, and other scholars have been doing recent- Like most of the people who studied and wrote about the house, Kidder Smith did not base his attribution on visual evidence or connect it with his own description. When the facade of the Taft Museum is compared to Hoban's most famous work, the White House in Washington, it is obvious that the two buildings could not have been designed by the same architect. They are both white houses with flanking wings and classical colonnades but the resemblance stops there. The roof lines, the window frames, the materials, the scale, the degree of detail—the whole approach to the classical vocabulary—is radically different. But those differences were not noted in the literature on the house which showed little interest in the building fabric of the house, what it looked like, how it was made, how it worked, and how it evolved over time. The research on the house that has been done over the years concentrates mainly on the builders as well as Illustration of the front (west) elevation of the Baum-Taft house (TaftMuseum) published in Harper's Weekly, July, 1858. Please note the architectural differences between this draw- ly on historic houses in Virginia. Also, most of the people who worked on the Baum-Taft house in the past did not list their sources. Some did not even include footnotes or bibliographies so their statements, dates, and attributions cannot be substantiated. When the same date appears again and again, it is impossible to determine whether it was repeated because the author found it in a book or article or if he came to the same conclusion on his own. Although much of the existing research has limited usefulness for further inquiry, it shows what the house has meant to previous generations, enriches the lore of local history, and demonstrates the complexity involved in gathering information about even a well-preserved, existing structure. The first document that pertains, even peripherally, to the Baum-Taft house is the earliest map of the city in the collection of The Cincinnati Historical Society: Israel ing and the 1857 lithograph on page two of this publication. Spring 1988 The Baum-Taft House 35 Ludlow's Plan of the Town of Cincinnati in 1802, which is Society for the Promotion of Agriculture, Manufacturing, hand-drawn in ink. Since it does not take in the area where and the Domestic Economy he served as a trustee of the the house is located, it provides only a kind of negative Select Council of the corporation of the city but declined an evidence. It suggests that the area east of the public landing offer to represent the district in the United States Congress.7 and Fort Washington had not yet been platted and developed. Visual evidence exists to support Baum's acquiOn September 1, 1812, Martin Baum pur- sition of the land where the Taft Museum is located. It chased the site of the Taft Museum from Daniel Symmes, suggests that if not by 1812, then by 181 5, the city had and the transfer of the land is on file in the Hamilton County grown to encompass the site. A Plan of Cincinnati, Including Courthouse.3 Baum had come to Cincinnati during the All the Later Additions and Subdivisions Engraved for Daniel mid-1790's. Marilyn Ott, a former Taft Museum docent, Drake's Statistical View of 1 815, in the collection of The found his name in the church records of the First Presbyteri- Cincinnati Historical Society, extends about five blocks east an Church of Cincinnati as early as June 11, 1794, and in the of Broadway along the river. The land in the newly incorpobirth and baptismal registry of the Salem Reformed Church rated eastern area is subdivided, and a big green space appears (now the United Church of Christ) in Hagerstown, Mary- on the side of the eventual site of the Baum-Taft house, land, where Baum was born on June 15, 1765.4 Other located between Symmes and Congress (later Fourth and sources, such as H.A. Ratterman's Der Deutsche Pionier ofThird) streets east of Pike Street. And, in the memoirs of 1 878s and a 1954 Literary Club paper, "Benjamin Latrobe, John Hough James, who lived in Cincinnati from 181 3 to Was he the Architect (?) of the Taft Museum," by librarian 1826, there is a reference to a garden planted for Baum on Carl Vitz6 maintain that Baum was born in Hagenau, Alsace, the west side of Deer Creek by a gardener named Schnetz Germany. The City Directory of 182 5 lists his place of birth assome time around i8i6or 1817.8 Pennsylvania. On another map of Cincinnati which is next When Baum arrived, Cincinnati was a village in a chronological sequence, the Plan of Cincinnati, Including of 500 with ninety-four cabins and ten frame houses. He All the late Additions & Subdivisions Engravedfor Oliver Earnsworth built a two-story frame structure across the street from in 1 819, the green space is not shown. There are no lot lines Yeatman's Tavern (the center of the city's social, political, around the Baum property. But there is a house in the and economic life at the time) on the northwest corner of vicinity, one of the five large and imposing ones in the city Front and Sycamore streets, opened a general store, and that were illustrated on the map. It is probably the William soon became one of the city's wealthiest citizens. In 1804 he Lytle house which stood in what is now Lytle Park. Documents from the next year indicate that a married Ann Sommerville Wallace and eventually became the brother-in-law of several prominent early citizens such as house was under construction on the Baum property. There Judge Jacob Burnet, Nehemiah Wade, Samuel Perry, and was a financial "panic" in 1820 when the Cincinnati Branch Matthew Wallace, the pastor of the First Presbyterian Church. of the U.S. Bank sent some notes to Washington that had After his marriage, he built a brick residence next to the store been issued against land and other collateral, and the central at Front and Sycamore streets. He expanded his business U.S. Bank sent them back. A number of Cincinnati's most interests, becoming a partner in as many as seven separate prominent citizens lost their fortunes and their houses in the firms including Cincinnati's first sugar refinery, the first iron economic destabilization that followed. Martin Baum was foundry in the West, and the first steam mill where flour, one of them.9 Evidence of Baum's difficulties is recorded in wool, cotton, and whiskey were made. In 1 803 he helped form the Miami Exporting Company "to try to develop the papers of William Lytle at The Cincinnati Historical facilities for shipping goods," briefly became involved with Society. They contain an undated list of twenty properties, canal building and steamboats, and then turned to banking. which Baum offered to sell him with the owner's estimates The Miami Exporting Company became the first bank in of their value, including: the West. Baum was its first president, and when the United States Bank opened a branch in Cincinnati in 1817, he ... Three lots and the house where I live 8000.00 became a director. He was also involved with the first sub- (presumably at Pike and Congress streets) scription library, the Lancastrian School, Cincinnati Col- .. .Nine acresland this side ofT)eerCreek andNew House 30000.00 lege, the Western Museum, the Cincinnati Literary Society, (presumably the Taft Museum) the Gesangverein, and the Apollonian Society. Active in the Fifty acres or thereabouts adjoining the above 2 5 000.00 Queen City Heritage In a letter of August 22, 1820, Baum offered to sell Lytle his Broadway property for $ 31,400 and "my Deercreek land, including the new House and all the materials thereon for $ 30,600, or both properties for a total of $62,000." The next day, in another letter, Lytle made a counter-offer of $62,000 for the two properties and seven additional ones which Baum had valued at $155,733.33. A deal was never struck even though more letters followed, and in one Baum said, "... I must have $ 1000 or thereabouts in advance because without some money I & my Family must starve."10 They did not starve, and in 1825 they appear to have been living in the "new House" (the Baum-Taft house). They are listed in the City Directory as residing at Pike and Symmes (Fourth) streets, instead of Pike and Congress as before, and there are several references to parties given by Baum in the house. Henry Howe notes: "His hospitable home was open to all intellectually great men who visited Cincinnati, and German literary men were especially welcome."11 Charles Frederick Goss refers to a garden party in the house during the summer of 1 82 5 }2 An account written after Mrs. Baum's death in 1864 says: "[it was] for those days quite a splendid mansion. When it was finished he gave a party, which assembled before sunset, and separated before the present time for assembling parties. There were present a large number of old pioneers (now residing with the dead). .. ,"13 Curiously, there is a similar account of a party given by the next owner of the house, Nicholas Longworth, during the 1830's.14 The Baum-Taft house seems to have been the site of great social events in the city, as it is today, but it did not remain for long in Baum's possession. He and The Malta Gray Room, looking southwest, the Baum-Taft house, c. 1925 during the residency of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Phelps Taft. No particular attempt was made to treat the house as a historic artifact during the occupancy of the Tafts; they lived in it comfortably, in the style of the day. his wife deeded the house, its land, and other property in the city, the county, and the state to the Bank of the U.S. on November 12, 1825, in payment of a debt to the bank of $50,000 plus court expenses.15 The property is described in the deed as including about four and one-half acres instead of the nine Baum had offered to Lytle earlier and is said to include the area between Third and Fifth streets, Pike, and a street laid out at the back of the Baum property, which is now known as Butler Street. While the house belonged to the bank, it appears to have been leased to a Mrs. Anne Wood who operated a "school for young ladies." Charles Greve's Centen nial History of Cincinnati of 1904 mentions a reference in th City Directory of 18 29 to "a respectable female school kept b Mrs. Wood on Pike between Symmes and Fifth streets;" and an undated interview with Mr. Davis L. James, Sr., of the James Book Store in the museum archives notes: "The Taft house was used as a school for girls by his grandmother, Mrs. Anne Wood, and was known as Belmont House. She occupied it for only a short time and then the Longworths bought it."16 Indeed, Nicholas Longworth, a prominent Cincinnati businessman like Baum, purchased the house from the Bank of the U.S. on September 10, 1829, for $28,000.17 Contemporary accounts suggest that the house returned to the kind of existence for which it had been built, but, like those from Baum's time, the accounts reveal more about the life within (and outside) the walls than the walls themselves. In a "Retrospect of Western Travel," Harriet Martineau described the people she met and the things she saw in this "splendid house" when she was in America in 18 34 and 1835: The proprietor has a passion for gardening, and his ruling taste seems likely to be a blessing to the city. He employs four gardene and toils in his grounds with his own hands. His garden is on a terrace which overlooks the canal [now Eggelston Avenue], and mostparklike eminences form the background of the view. Betwee the garden and the hills extend his vineyards, from the produce o which he has succeeded in making twelve kinds of wine, some o which are highly praised by good judges. .. .In this house is West' preposterous picture of Ophelia, the sight ofwhich amazed me afte all I had heard of it. ... The party at this house was the largest and most elegant of any that I attended in Cincinnati. Among many other guests we met one of the judges of the Supreme Court, a member of Congress and his lady, two Catholic priests, Judge Ha the popular writer, with divines, physicians, lawyers, merchants and their families. The spirit and superiority of the conversation were worthy of the people assembled.18 Spring 1988 The Baum-Taft House 37 Like other writers from the early years, she The second half of the nineteenth century, does not mention the architecture. There are contemporary however, produced some visual documentation. A rare handreferences to Longworth's philanthropy and to his art col- colored insurance map in the collection of The Cincinnati lection, which accounts for the Robert Duncanson murals, Historical Society, the Martin Insurance Map of 1 8 5 5, depicts though they are not mentioned either. the plan of the house and its outbuildings.20 Since it shows The murals do not seem to have been the only the house with wings, the wings must have been in place change Longworth made. The building itself suggests that by this time. Since the house occupies a green space in the substantial alterations were made around 1830. The wings middle of a rather intensely developed area—a different kind may even have been added as they are awkwardly attached to of place than Harriet Martineau described—the neighborthe central block. The windows in the wing and in the hood must have changed between 1835 and 1855. And central block are of different sizes and do not line up. The because it faces Pike Street, rather than the river as does the woodwork on the interior has a slightly sharper profile in Kilgour house shown on the next page of the Martin Insurthe wings than in the central portion and seems to date from ance Map, it seems to be a hybrid type—part town house, part 1 830-1 840 instead of 1 820-1 830. And some of the base-country house. It has outbuildings, indicated with the boards are not aligned with the plinths supporting the door Roman numerals XV, which mean "frame sheds, stables or frames. Longworth had a large family for whom he said he outhouses." The stable is on the southeast corner of the lot, bought the house, so the additions may have been made to and there are other houses on the property nearby. The accommodate their needs. However, the same kind of ceil- .Martin Insurance Map, like its successors published by the ing joists appear in the attic over the wings as over the central Sanborn Map Company, is color-coded. Yellow indicates block, and the basic configuration of the house (a tall central frame construction; pink indicates brick. Many of the other block with smaller flanking wings) is similar to that of a few fine houses of the time, such as the Kilgour house, the other houses of the period in the area. The wings on the Literary Club, and the ones near the Taft Museum, were brick. The Baum-Taft house is inscribed with an eight (VIII), which means "dwellings part brick and part frame," presumably because of the foundation which is stone with some brick arches and walls. The porch is frame (XV). And there is a plus sign (+) on the house indicating a shingle roof. Does that mean that the standing seam roof was not original to the house, or is the reference to shingle a mistake? Maps of this kind are usually accurate, especially about materials, since they were made for fire insurance purposes. A rare color lithograph of The Longworth House in 1857 from "The Memorial of the Golden Wedding of Nicholas Longworth and Susan Longworth, Celebrated in Cincinnati on Christmas Eve, 1857" provides the earliest dated image of the Baum-Taft house.21 Since it was made from a drawing, the artist may have simplified or altered the actual appearance of the house. No roof is shown over the Baum-Taft house may have been planned from the begin- central block, perhaps because it was not visible from the ning, only executed later. Certainly major interior alter- artist's perspective. The entrance door is simply a plain ations occurred. Hairline cracks in the plaster indicate that semi-circular arch, different in both style and character from doorways once led from the main corridor to the Gray and the elaborate Victorian entrance which appears in later phoMalta Gray galleries, and the woodwork in the central hall tographs and the entrance to the museum today, which is and corridor appears to have been rearranged. There are shown in the architects' drawings from the 1930's. This one enough inconsistencies in the physical fabric of the house is narrower and has no windows around it. How then was that we know that it was changed in some way, several times, the entrance hall lighted? Gaslight, which was instituted in but there is no written documentary evidence of the alter- the 1840's, was available by the time this lithograph was ations from the 1 8 30's and 1 840's.19 made; but since some kind of natural lighting would have W.H. Martin, Map of Cincinnati for Insurance Companies and l e s / Estate Agencies Containing Every Lot and House with Its Number Classified According to the Reference Below, 1855, Vol. II, p. 9, collection of The Cincinnati Historical Society. This handcolored insurance map depicts the Baum-Taft house with its original outbuildings. Queen City Heritage been required earlier, this was either an alteration of the original entrance or a fabrication of the artist. In the lithograph, the portico and window sills are painted off-white, and the window entablatures are not bracketed. The stone and brick arched openings beneath the portico extend to the ground, and the stair railings are straight instead of splayed with plain ironwork evident. The sash windows in the wings have small nine-over-nine panes. Those in the central block are larger with six-over-six panes, and thinner than the ones in place today. The grilles over the ground-story windows are not punctuated with rosettes, and the ones on the oval windows in the attic are not shown at all. Clearly a lot of changes have been made. As the earliest visual resource, the lithograph was used in the 19 30's as a source of information for restoration, which seems to have been based on a general but incomplete knowledge of the Federal Style.22 Why was restoration necessary? Nicholas Longworth died in 1863, and the house passed to his son Joseph Longworth who decided not to move in. Some time around 1866, Francis E. Suire signed a ninety-nine year lease and began occupation of the residence. Since the Duncanson murals, commissioned by Longworth, were covered with wallpaper when the next owner took occupancy around 1870, it is assumed that the redecorating was done under Suire's tenancy. Around this time, the original wooden mantels were replaced with elaborate Victorian ones of marble or hand-carved oak, pine flooring in the major reception areas was overlaid with parquetry, a large central arched opening was cut into the west wall of the Music Room, the principal entrance on the facade was altered, the exterior staircases at the ends of the corridor were removed, and bay windows were added to the ends of the house.23 A number of images describing the house in the late nineteenth century survive. Unfortunately, very few of them are dated, and some are highly interpretive. A sketch by A.O. Elzner, a prominent Cincinnati architect who, with his partner, later designed the addition of a dining room for the Tafts, shows the house in a rather disheveled state, presumably intended to make it appear romantic. The plantings on the grounds are overgrown with dying trees and dead branches are strewn among them. A door beneath the bay window on the north elevation seems to be sinking into the ground. The windows have no shutters (they were in place in the 1857 lithograph), but some of them are covered with striped awnings which are folded back, half-opened, and pulled down. Two-over-two double hung windows have replaced the multi-paned windows shown in the earlier rendering, and an elaborate decorative arched entrance with lights is now in place. The front staircase is hidden behind bushes, and the ironwork is barely visible. A drawing labeled "Sinton Residence, Cincinnati" by E.A. Lloyd and dated 1890 presents a somewhat cleaner image, with less prominent chimneys, no awnings, shutters on the windows in the wings, bracketed entablatures over those in the central block, and the light fixtures as well as ornamental fencing that survive today, separating the grounds from Pike Street. A standing seam roof is clearly in place in this frontal view, as it is in the Elzner sketch, but the ends of the house where the north and south elevations and the bay windows are located are not visible. However, the welcoming curved staircase and the depiction of the door itself is very clear. It has small panels of glass in the lunette, Gothic tracery on the door, and is flanked by arched side lights. The doorway looks wider and plainer in photographs presumed to have been taken around that time. One of them shows a bedroom wing on the north side, an addition which was made in 1890 by David Sinton. Sinton, another Cincinnati industrialist, purchased the house from Joseph Longworth in 1869, according to historians Goss and Greve, though some sources say 1870 or 1 871.24 Sinton lived in the house during the 1 870's and remained there even after his daughter, Anna, married Charles Phelps Taft in 1 87 3 in the Music Room. Sinton died on August 31, 1900.25 For obvious reasons, the Sinton and Taft reigns run together. The Tafts remained in the house until they died, Charles in 1929 and Anna in 19 3 1, at which point it became a museum. As stipulated in the Tafts' deed of gift, the Cincinnati Institute of Fine Arts was created in 1927 to administer the museum, and matching funds were raised by the citizens of Cincinnati during the next year to help fund its operation. The museum opened to the public on November 29, 1932.26 The addition of a series of north bedrooms by Sinton was in place by 1 8 91, and probably by the time of Lloyd's drawing, because the residence is clearly shown on the Insurance Maps of Cincinnati of 1 891 with the bedroom wing.27 In the Atlas of Cincinnati of 1883-1884, the bay windows are shown but the addition is not.28 In some old notes in the files of the museum, Louis Belmont was said to be the architect of the bedroom addition. But he was also listed as the architect of the dining room extension, and he was certainly not since the drawings for that project are in the museum archives. The dining room was enlarged by the Tafts in 191 o by the architects Elzner & Anderson. They had designed a number of innovative early concrete buildings in Cincin- Spring 1988 The Baum-Taft House nati including the Ingalls Building at Fourth and Vine streets, the first concrete frame skyscraper in the world; the Elephant House at the Cincinnati Zoological Gardens; and the American Book Company Building, located next door to the Taft Museum. They were responsible for a number of very handsome Georgian and Greek Revival houses in East Walnut Hills, Clifton, and Avondale. Elzner & Anderson added a colonnaded niche, classicizing plaster work, and an extension to the Taft dining room; and they may have added decoration to the ceiling of the Music Room as well. The Tafts also commissioned drawings from the firm for a twostory "gallery" to be built onto the north bedroom wing in 1917. Although the plans for the project survive in the museum archives, they were not realized. No particular attempt was made to treat the house as a historic artifact during the time the Tafts occupied it. They lived in it comfortably, in the style of the day, as contemporary photographs illustrate and historians of the time have noted. The museum archives contain a whole sequence of photographs of the interior including a postcard labeled: "The Taft Residence, 4th and Pike Streets, Cincinnati" made for the "Ohio Valley Industrial Exposition, Cincinnati, Aug. 29 to September 24, 1910." It not only documents the appearance of the house, but suggests that it was invested with special significance at the time. The historians' statements prove even more conclusively that during the early twentieth century, the architecture of the house was noticed and appreciated. Charles Theodore Greve described the house in stylistic terms: A.O. Elzner, Sketch of Sinton Residence, c. 1880, Cincinnati, Ohio. Note the introduction of the bay window on the north elevation and the Victorian entrance. Later Colonial or rather of a transition period from the square house without the door porch to the pseudo-classic when the facade was in evolution before the stucco Greek temple was used to mask an ordinary two-story dwelling, square windows, balconies and all.... The main porch or center has grown half a story, lighted by two oval openings on each side of the facade and the roof has lost some of its pitch. It has pushed out two low wings on the front line. ... Then the whole has risen from the ground somewhat, disclosing windows. The cellar has become a basement. The approach has widened the force of the door porch, which is led up to by nine stone steps. Two wooden columns close together on each at the corners support the pediment which crowns the portico. ...29 Greve was very conscious of the history and evolution of architectural styles, but he oversimplified the process that actually takes place over time. His view was excessively linear and progressive, and he assumed, as most later writers did, that the overall form of the house had been determined all at once, though he was aware—and even critical—of some "alterations:" The door where the character of a house is so strongly told, has suffered a base "alteration" and no longer holds the half-wheel Queen City Heritage ence, 4U1 am: l'ike Sts., Cincinnati. OHIO • CINCINNATI ACO ... - <j 10 transoms that once must have been the ornament of the house.30 The poetically old-fashioned house is wooden, the boards laid on His judgments were consistent with those of flat... the front door opens to a comfortable hall carpeted deep the architectsforthe restoration, but he did not explain how red.— The woodwork furnishings of the library are wonderful he arrived at his conclusions. He mentioned the house's black Flemish oak carvings. Opposite the front door and opening "good proportion," noted that it was made of "wood put on into a transverse hall is the ballroom, a huge, airy old room with s smooth and painted white," and said that "the position and great windowsgiving on a porch which overlooks a backgarden. .. dignity are its best features."31 The house neither in its architecture, furnishings, A few years later, another local historian, the nor decoration makes any pretence to any particular style, nor is Reverend Charles Frederick Goss, discussed the house more there any trace ofthat wretched thing so incompatible with the sens passionately, personally, and romantically, but with a similar of home, the trail of the collector. Yet the architecture is predomi regard for its history and for history in general: nantly colonial and there is a notable and noted collection of Down in the choicest part of town in a spot where the bugle notespictures numbering some seventy-five canvases hanging properly from Ft. Washington would have sounded... stands a house which here and there upon the walls in all the rooms. ... as a home always vitally touching the most pregnant historic There is a sense of great wealth spent lavishly but interest of the city, connects the past with the present. Over threequietlyfor comfort and beauty. There is perfect harmony. A nd ther quarters ofa century—well-nigh a century old, this house is perhapsis in it that best quality ofall in human life or art, suggestion. One the most individual, the most symbolic, of the deepest interest and thinks not only of all the lovely and rare things that stand before significance of any in Cincinnati. ... one's eyes now, pictures and frail vases which will so far outlast th There is a broad and cheerful garden infront. ...A living eyes beholding them, but the quiet beautiful old home calls to low stone wall with high old-fashioned iron fence. ... Here even mind vanished days when former owners lived there,...33 before the portal of the place the word "old-fashioned" pleasantly Similar thinking must have influenced the intrudes. ... There are three sets of great stone gate-posts and youTafts' decision to convert their house and collection to a enter the middle one, turning the silver knob ofits lock, and walk upmuseum. One of the reasons that the house "called to mind the stone flagging to the stone steps of the portico with its sets of vanished days" was that its site remained bucolic long after pillars on either side.32 the entire rest of the downtown basin was intensely developed, However, when Goss described the way the as illustrated by a large drawing, a Panorama of Cincinnati Tafts lived in the house, he praised them for not being by J.L. Trout from 1901, in the collection of The Cincinnati inhibited by its architecture: Historical Society. In the panorama, prepared when the Postcard of The Taft Residence, but suggests that it was in4th and Pike Streets, Cincinnati, vested with special significance for the "Ohio Valley Industrial at the time. Exposition, Cincinnati, August 29-September 24, 1910." This postcard not only documents the appearance of the house, The Baum-Taft House Spring 1988 41 downtown area was being transformed from a compact had done so. ... The Baum house exemplifies this preference. It has mixed-use nineteenth century city with houses, markets, the air... of a country seat, rather than of a town house, recalling churches, factories, offices, and business houses intermingled the "seats" of the Virginia and Maryland magnates of its period with one another into a purely commercial center with tall in its lateral extension and in its vertical restriction, as well as office buildings and stores, the Baum-Taft house and its in the amplitude of its grounds. ... The reduction of the portico to immediate neighbors occupy a verdant oasis. Two years later, a porch shows a willingness to sacrifice to practicality, of which the the houses on either side were demolished and factories results are architecturally rather unfortunate. A tetrastyle "order" were built next door. But the interest in history was moti- seems to be indicated, or if not that, a distyle of much less attenuvated by more than nostalgia. The writers of the time were ated columns, even with pedestals, if necessary to bring them into trying to demonstrate the value of previous cultural achieve- classical proportions. On the other hand, the sacrifice ofclassicality ments. One of the ways they did so (perhaps not completely to practicality in the attic of the central block, apparently required intentionally) was by producing pedigrees for works of art for servants' quarters or other subordinate uses and lightedfromits and architecture. own "ox-eyes," ignoring the requirement of some dividing member In 1908 Montgomery Schuyler, the most in- between it and its substructure, is architecturally effective, waiving fluential architecture critic of the day and one of the first convention and precedent, which Latrobe always took a pleasure in to appreciate American architecture, wrote in the Archi- waiving, provided there was anything to be gained by a waiver. tectural Record: The central block is signalized, the "composition" is attained. It ... there is at least one piece of evidence that in the is only a pity that the porch should be so excrescential.34 Cincinnati of 1827 there was a refinement incompatible with Schuyler was not the first to attribute the the notion that the "Domestic Manners" which the English critic house to Latrobe. As early as 1887, an anonymous editor [Mrs. Trollope] depicted were all-pervading... the house which labeled a picture of it in the Inland Architect and News Record: Martin Baum built in Cincinnati in 1817, and for which he "Old colonial residence, Cincinnati, O.; Benjamin Henry was well inspired to choose for his architect Benjamin H. Latrobe, Latrobe, architect."35 But because of his reputation, Schuyler's then fulfilling the last year of his service as architect of the Capitol opinions were echoed by a host of other writers. The Baumat Washington. It is quite unmistakenly Latrobe}s, to those who Taft house was attributed to Latrobe in Thieme-Becker's art know the work that he was doing in Baltimore and elsewhere in historical dictionary and by the art historian Fiske Kimball; those years, and who remember his insistence, in design as well asand even though Kimball worded his attribution carefully in words, upon "simplicity" as the first of architectural qualities. and refuted it later, it lived on in the literature. In 1919 ... It was this preference that induced him to revertfromthe Renais-Kimball wrote: sance to the models of classical Athenian antiquity as soon as he... there are in Ohio, in Michigan, and elsewhere beyond the was able to do so, and long before any other American architect Alleghenies, many most interesting houses in which the traditions of the Colonial style and of the classical revival were continued down to the Civil War. Notable among these is the old Martin Baum house in Cincinnati, now lovingly preserved, in spite of the encroachments of industry, as the residence of Mr. Charles P. : * \ i Taft. ... The house itself with its smooth wall surfaces, its slender, dignified columns, its delicate cornices and window caps, has suffered but little in its century of existence. The original doorway, % to be sure, was replaced by one of Victorian pattern, and the lamps with their heavy pedestals mere additions of the period. ... 7) Always admired, the house attracted the attention ofthe late Montgomery Schuyler, a leader in the study of A merican architecture, who ascribed the authorship of its design to Benjamin Latrobe... the most highly trained andgifted architect ofhis day in America. The attribution is indeed a tempting one, especially as Latrobe was in Pittsburgh from 1811 to 1 814, and is reported by his son to have furnished designs for several houses along the Ohio. Although no preserved examples ofdomestic buildings surely designed E. Robinson and R.H. Pidgeon, Civil and Topographical Engineers Atlas of the City of Cincinnati, Ohio from Official Records and Actual Surveys, 1883-1884, PI. 4, collection of The Cincinnati Historical Society. By comparing various fire insurance maps, we know that the bay windows on the north and south elevations were in place by 1883-1884. 42 Queen City Heritage by him, which might serve as reliable terms of comparison, havetwo tasks which are somewhat incompatible, though no one been identified, there is a certain affinity in the window treatmentseems to have sensed so at the time. The architects were and other features of the Cincinnati house with details in some of Garber & Woodward of Cincinnati who had worked with Cass Gilbert of New York on the Union Central Building, Latrobe}s public buildings.36 This is a much more cautious and non- with John Russell Pope on the Cincinnati Gas & Electric committal attribution than Schuyler's, but it was repeated Company Building, and who had designed the Cincinnati carelessly even after Kimball changed his mind. As late as Club; the Dixie Terminal Building; and Withrow, Walnut 1970, in Early Homes of Ohio, I.T. Frary wrote: "Local tradi- Hills, and Western Hills high schools. Garber's son, Woodie, tion names as the architect James Hoban, who designed the a student at Cornell University at the time and later a White House at Washington, but... better grounds exist for prominent local modern architect, assisted on the project. attributing it to Benjamin Henry Latrobe."37 Kimball's even- He wrote a thorough paper on the effort which supplements tual reservations were not widely known, but even those Siple's brochure and derives from the same point of view who were aware of them did not always acknowledge them. which was very typical of the time. In a June 14, 1940, letter to Miss Margaret Kremers at the The Taft restoration began in 1929 at almost Taft Museum Kimball said: exactly the same moment as the restoration of Colonial You have tracked down one of my youthful hypotheses, one of the Williamsburg. Although until recently historians of archivery few I ever advanced without a definite documentary basis. I tecture have tended to think of that time as the beginning of knew that Latrobe had been in Pittsburgh about 1813 -17... that the era of modern architecture, or at least as the heyday of he had designed Ashland for Henry Clay and a house in Newport, Art Deco, it was also a period of enthusiastic classical revival, Kentucky and this led me to venture the idea that the Martin as Garber & Woodward's buildings attest. Since American Baum (Taft) house might be by him. But when Walter Siple was architects of the 1920's and 1930's were trained in the restoring the Taft house, he wrote me, sending me what informa- tradition of the French Beaux Arts, they studied architecturtion he had, and I answered him then that I had abandoned any al .history, but it was a very selective history, romantic in character, and weak in its understanding of American work. belief that Latrobe was concerned.38 However, in a brochure published by the Taft Yet architects were becoming interested in Americana. Museum soon after it opened, Siple (who was also director of Although Garber & Woodward's earlier commercial buildthe Cincinnati Art Museum) said: "The name of Benjamin ings had been based on Italian Renaissance or Greco-Roman Henry Latrobe, designer of the White House porticos, has prototypes, Withrow High School drew its inspiration from been associated with the Taft residence by both Montgomery the Georgian Colonial, and Walnut Hills was a tribute to Schuyler and Fiske Kimball"39 and went on to quote the Jefferson, representing a free and eclectic cross between the earlier attribution. Of course, he may not have received University of Virginia and Monticello. Kimball's disclaimer when the brochure went to press, and Historians of the period were romantic, too. he did say that "it has not been possible to establish this At Williamsburg they painted a pretty picture of life in attribution."40 But then he reprinted a passage from the eighteenth century America with everything clean and sparJournal ofLatrobe, which supported it: kling, no animal smells or slaves' quarters; and all the buildWhile at Pittsburgh, he designed several private buildings that ings were restored—as well as they could be in 1929—to the were erected there or in the immediate vicinity. Alsofor otherplaces.same moment in time. (They have subsequently been altered Among these last were the residences of Henry Clay at Lexington as new information was accumulated.) The 1988 view of a and Governor Taylor at Newport.41 living, changing, messy, confusing, overlapping history was Those houses were later destroyed byfireand simply not in vogue at the time. were not available for comparison, as Siple noted, but he did Attempts were made to be accurate but many not compare the Baum-Taft house with any of the docu- of the examination techniques available today were not mented existing Latrobe buildings that were available, such known. Siple explained: "In two rooms and the hall we as the Thomas Worthington house, "Adena," in nearby found traces of the original tinting of the walls—powder Chillicothe, Ohio. blue, lemon yellow, grey green. Here these colors have been Siple's brochure is most useful for its descrip- used," in other rooms, "colors popular in the 1820's—grey, tion of the methodology used during the restoration. The violet, and light blue."42 He noted: "With the exception of building was both "restored" and converted to a museum: the mantels and chair rails, all of the original woodwork has Spring 1988 The Baum-Taft House remained intact."43 He assumed that if it was there, it was original. Charles Brownell and Richard Cote, two of the scholars who came to Cincinnati for a symposium in June 1987, found woodwork from four or five different periods and noticed inconsistencies in its use. They noticed peculiar junctures between mouldings as well as other irregularities proving that the house must have changed over time. But in the early 1930's, the "authorities" assumed it was from one or two building periods, and they took—or mistook—whatever they found for "original." The restorers also felt free to add new elements that resembled the "original" ones they found. They removed the Victorian mantels because they did not see the Victorian era as part of the house's "history," and they put in "new" ones salvaged or taken from other early nineteenth century houses or designed to "match" existing trim. None of the mantels in the house today are original. Even more shocking by modern standards, they added new museum casework in the Federal Style. In the 1980's it is standard practice to insert display cases which are obviously modern so that no one is given the impression that they were part of the original building. The U.S. Department of Interior's Standards require rehabilitators to do so, even on commercial buildings, whenever historic preservation tax incentives are used. But in the early 1930's, it was thought more appropriate to make the cabinetry "fit in" in order to create the illusion of an early nineteenth century house. The Baum-Taft house restoration was by no means an unsophisticated one for its time. The architects and administrators made a serious attempt to be accurate, and they published information about the effort, explaining what was new and what was old and why they had made the decisions they did. The brochure is especially valuable now since all of the paint samples and most of the other documentary materials were lost when a garage in which they were stored suffered a massive leak. The brochure explains: Portico, the Baum-Taft House (TaftMuseum), c. 1900, collection of The Cincinnati Historical Society. This elaborate Victorian entrance and the later light fixtures were removed in 1931 during the conversion of the house to a museum. 44 Queen City Heritage An effort was made to restore the interior as nearly as possible to its original condition. A careful inspection of the woodwork proved that the original color was a pure white. ...In addition to the colors discussed above, wall paper borders of the first quarter of the nineteenth century have been used in several rooms. The dressing of the windows was based on platesfrom Mcubles et Objets de Gout published from 1819 to 1820. The overdraperies are, with the exception of those in the offices, of materials dating from approximately 1820. We know from advertisements in the early papers and directories that wealthy people of Cincinnati were buying many things manufactured in France and England, and they were in contact with such fashionable centers as Philadelphia and Alexandria. .. . 44 Our idea with regard to the installation was to provide a dignified background for the Toft collections—this background to reflect the feeling of a home of the first quarter of the nineteenth century. ... We were fortunate in obtaining several pieces of furniture from the workshop of Duncan Phyfe which were formerly in the Louis Guerineau Myers collection. These have been supplemented by old chairs which harmonize with the Duncan Phyfe style and provide visitors with seating accommodations which do not destroy the spirit of the rooms. ...45 Even though there was general agreement on this approach, there was one area where the architects and the director did not see eye-to-eye. That was on the preservation of the Duncanson murals. Siple, being an art historian, decided to restore them. The architects who were primarily concerned with the restoration of the house wanted to have them removed and replaced with wall coverings typical of the 1820's. Siple's position was less consistent, but it was more in keeping with museum philosophy and later restoration policy. In the brochure Siple touches on some of the problems of converting the building to a museum but does not mention some of the ones that created the most dramatic changes, such as the new visitors' entry on the north elevation and the staircase to the second floor which radically alters the impression one would have received in the nineteenth century. Architects' drawings in the museum archives show that they labored over the design for the entrance, perhaps in an attempt to distinguish the new public entrance from the original private one facing Pike Street while preserving the illusion of an historic house. They produced three schemes before one was finally approved. Even so, the final scheme, like the new Pike Street entrance, which Garber & Woodward also designed, resembles stock neo-Federal details of the period. These insertions have none of the rough quirky charm of the original woodwork, a, b, and c. Garber & Woodward Architects, Three Revised Plans for North Entrance to Baum-Tafthouse (Taft Museum), 1931, Cincinnati, Ohio. The architects produced three schemes for the north (visitor's) entrance before the third (c) was finally accepted. Spring 1988 The Baum-Taft House 45 and most of the "matching" details no longer seem to the only man of this nature and capability at that time and who match. The baseboards in the President's Room have a was designing residences in this immediate area.47 streamlined Art Deco quality, and the cabinetry with its Although Garber placed greater weight on anachronistic movable modern shelving hovers awkwardly between reproduction and functionalism. A certain amount supposed similarities between Latrobe's work and the fabric of detailing is unavoidably dated, even today when we have a of the museum than other writers had, his attribution rests on much more complete understanding of historic American generalizations rather than observations based on comparative visual analysis. And he emphasized the fact that Latrobe architecture. The paper Woodie Garber prepared during was in Cincinnati around the time the house was built. If Garber, an architect, supported his case with the restoration is valuable for the insights it provides about biographical coincidence, it should not be surprising that architectural thinking on the subject at the time. Although young Garber drew heavily on Siple's brochure, repeating Carl Vitz, a librarian, made it the primary basis of his arguverbatim many of its passages, he also surveyed and quoted ment. In a 19 5 4 Literary Club paper titled, "Benjamin Henheavily from the literature on the Baum-Taft house: Schuyler, ry Latrobe, Was He the Architect (?) of the Taft Museum," Kimball's initial positive attribution to Latrobe, Trollope, Vitz stressed the factors that could have led Baum to comThe Journal ofLatrobe, the Lytle-Baum correspondence, Law- mission Latrobe: rence MendenhalPs Baum's Folly, Clara Longworth de Many reasons can begiven why Latrobe might have been sought out Chambrun's The Making ofNicholas Longworth, Cist's Cincin-by Baum. To him, a banker, Latrobe'sfirst important commission, the Bank of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, would have been nati in 1 8 51, Martineau, Goss, Great Georgian Houses of known. ... The residence of Worthington and Clay and of General America, Meubles et Objets de Gout, Liberty Hall, the Daily Gazette, the Cincinnati Directory of 1 8 3 6-18 3 7, papers in Taylor the just across the river, could not have been unknown to him. Taft Museum library, and the United States Department of Similarity ofinterests could have brought them together. Baum was Interior's Historic American Buildings Survey. His paper wasGerman born, and Latrobe's mother was German and he had amply illustrated, containing even a rare print found on spent his years of youth and early manhood in German schools and book ends owned by the Comtesse de Chambrun, which he continental travel. Both men were interested in Ohio and Mississaid was "the earliest known drawing of the Taft Museum" sippi River navigation. ... Because ofBaum's interest in trade with though it showed double hung windows instead of ones with New Orleans, he would have known that Latrobe had been engaged small panes and the present curving front steps. He spoke to build its light house and waterworks. Both were interested in with confidence and clearly believed that "the house as it gardens. Baum's enterprises had to do with machinery and we stands today, with the exception of the wing addition and find Latrobe often occupied with mechanical engineering few slight changes, is as near as it has been possible to restore, problems. ... He was well offfinancially. Baum would want the the same as originally constructed."46 Yet, it is obvious that best and Latrobe was tops and available. This would all seem very his knowledge of American architectural history was, by obvious, could we only find one clear documentary reference, or 1980's standards, sketchy. Like most writers of the time almost equally so, if Latrobe had leftfew or no records.48 and earlier, he attributed the house to Latrobe: In fact he left voluminous records, and there is no mention of the Baum house in them. There are letters In researching and exploring the Taft Museum for restoration, my from Latrobe's wife and daughter which substantiate the father, Frederick W. Garber, Architect, and I, separately then fact that the family had a ten-day unplanned stop in Cincinjointly, concluded that, though no documentation has yet substan- nati in March 1820, but they make no mention of a commistiated it, the Architect was certainly Benjamin Henry Latrobe. It sion. Still, Vitz pointed out a number of ways Latrobe might cannot be justly ascribed to Hoban as it contradicts his recordedhave made contact with Baum at the time. He pinned his work in its more English tradition and formality. Latrobe, whose hopes on circumstantial evidence, and hopes they were. He imagination roved more freely yet as surely in his own creativity, very obviously wanted to be able to prove that Latrobe was expresses a more French flair in his personal departures from rigidthe architect of the Taft Museum. When he found positive tradition. This is indeed a residence in thegrand manner, but it is attributions, like Schuyler's and Kimball's, he used them to not wood posing as stone, but wood expressed in its classic self withsupport his argument. But when he wrote to Talbot Hamlin, inventive freedom. The sophistication ofproportion, the devices sothe leading Latrobe scholar of the time, and was discoursurely and uniquely applied here are indeed a signature ofLatrobe, aged, he decided to "cease theorizing about architectural 40 Queen City Heritage styles and think of it only in terms of the conditions and journal or in Mrs. Latrobe's letter, both published in the Wilson situations at the time and of the two men who either were orbook, if such an important job from his designs had been under were not associated in the building." (italics his)49 In this wayconstruction at the time.50 his paper is typical of the commentaries on the Baum-Taft Hamlin's comments, of course, were cursory, and they were house—and probably of human nature as well. It shows that not published, so it is not surprising that the earlier attributhe writer heard what he wanted to hear and that he trusted tions survived. It is largely because misinformation continued to be repeated that Ruth K. Meyer, director of the Taft what he heard (or read) more than what he saw. Talbot Hamlin's response to his letter con- Museum, and its staff decided to invite specialists in the tains the first serious attempt to consider the authorship of field to convene for a symposium, comment on the attributions, and study the Baum-Taft house at first hand. the house on visual evidence. In it Hamlin said: William Seale, the foremost authority on James This brings us to the Sinton-Taft house. There is not a mention or 51 trace of Martin Baum or of any Cincinnati work in the existing Hoban and author of The President's House: A History began his presentation by remarking: "I had hoped that by Latrobe papers. Furthermore, stylistically the house seems to me to have nothing whatsoever to do with the kind ofarchitecture Latrobetonight I could tell you with absolute certainty that James stoodfor. If one compares it, for instance, with the Van Ness house,Hoban designed and built the Taft Museum 160 or more 52 the plans and elevations ofwhich are in Fiske KimbalPs Domestic years ago. Alas, I can't." He explained that there was little Architecture of the American Colonies and the Early Repub- documentary evidence to connect Hoban with any building besides the White House and described what was known lic, the difference in basic ideals becomes obvious. The interior trim is quite different from anything I could attribute to Latrobe, and about his life and work. He ended: "There is really not much to go on. I think the most concrete thing that can be said, the whole design and its detail seem to me a harmonious expression of the kind of "Late Colonial" or Federal work, against which in conclusion, is that the elusive architect of the Baum-Taft Latrobe was always protesting. Moreover, the dates are against anyhouse had much in common with James Hoban, if only in 53 possibility of his connection with it, for he was much too busy in his remarkable ability to evade history." Baltimore and too much worried about the completion of the New Charles Brownell, the leading Benjamin Orleans waterworks to make it probable that he was doing this Latrobe scholar, announced more confidently: "The ascriphouse at the same time. Surely there would have been some mentiontion does not have a leg to stand on, either in the form of of it in the account ofLatrobe}s visit to Cincinnati given in his written sources, primary and secondary, or in the form of Spring 1988 The Baum-Taft House 47 architectural evidence."54 He pointed out that, quite unlike Hoban, there is a wealth of material on Latrobe: "13 volumes of Latrobe journals, 14 sketchbooks by Latrobe, and, most important, 19 volumes of Latrobe's copies of outgoing letters" as well as "roughly 45 o architectural and engineering drawings... and records written not by Latrobe, such as institutional minutes and newspaper articles."55 He noted that "in the thousands of pages assembled at the Latrobe papers, as well as all of the evidence carefully compiled by Heather Hallenberg from Cincinnati sources, there does not exist so much as one recognizable phrase written by Latrobe or a contemporary of his to link him to Martin Baum's villa in any way, however tangential."56 Brownell explained that the Baum-Taft house typifies a Renaissanceinspired Adamesque style against which Latrobe's austere early Greek Revival work was very consciously reacting. After conducting a complete and precise visual analysis of the Adamesque manner, the Baum-Taft house, and buildings certainly attributed to Latrobe, he concluded: a considerable knowledge of the carpenter-builder tradition, concurred with Seale and Brownell. He suggested: "The Taft Museum may NOT, in fact, have been designed by an architect. Rather... (it was) constructed under the direction of a carpenter-builder who, more than likely, migrated to Cincinnati during the early 19th century and practiced his profession in the city at the time that the Taft Museum was built."58 He pointed out that in 1819 Cincinnati had a populaton of just over 10,000, and that the City Directory listed "between 80 and 100 principal house carpenters and joiners employing about 400 journey men and apprentices, 2 5 brick yards employing, during the season of making brick, about 200 workmen, 100 bricklayers, 30 plasterers, and 15 stonemasons. In a city of over 10,000 citizens, there were 800 individuals engaged in the building trade. Moreover, the 1819 directory did NOT list one architect in a city that by March 1819 had 1,890 buildings, of which 1,003 were dwelling houses."59 He explained how carpenter-builders worked and showed, convincingly, how the Baum-Taft house The architectural evidence offers no supportfor any hypothesis thatcould have belonged to their tradition. The symposium organized to find out "Who the building incorporates ideas from a Latrobe design that the builders adapted into something of their own. This circumstance, was the architect of the Taft Museum?" concluded with the though, should not make anyonegrieve. The Baum-Taft house can impression that the answer was "no one." The research showed that the question was infinitely more complicated than anystand on its own architectural merits.57 Richard Cote, an architectural historian with one had assumed, and the event produced a fuller history, as well as a richer historiography, of the Baum-Taft house. The Music Room, the Taft Museum, Cincinnati, Ohio. The Taft restoration began in 1929 at almost exactly the same moment as the restoration of Colonial Williamsburg. There was a great fervor to take houses back to their original period. James Hoban, Design for the President's House, collection of the Maryland Historical Society, Baltimore, Maryland. At the June 1987 symposium, "Who was the architect of the Taft Museum?" William Seale dispelled once and for all the attribution that James Hoban designed the Baum-Taft house. Dining Room, the Taft Museum, cases were designed by the Cincinnati, Ohio. Federal manfirm of Garber and Woodward tels salvaged from period in the Federal style. houses in the region replaced ones from the Victorian era during the restoration of the house in 1931. The display Spring 1988 The Baum-Taft House 1. This paper is an edited version of the introductory presentation at the symposium, "Who was the architect of the Taft Museum?" which took place in Cincinnati, Ohio, on June 1 1 and 12, 1987, at the Taft Museum. The symposium was conceived by Dr. Ruth K. Meyer, Taft Museum director. The preliminary research for this paper and the other lectures at the symposium was carefully and lovingly prepared by Heather Hallenberg, an art and architectural historian on the Taft Museum staff. 2. G.E. Kidder Smith, The Architecture of the United States, Vol. II, "The South and Midwest, An Illustrated Guide to Notable Buildings, Open to the Public" (New York, 1 98 1 with an introduction by Frederick D. Nichols and Frederick Koeper), p. 463. 3. Transfer of land from Daniel Symmes to Martin Baum, September 1, 1 812, Deed Book S., p. 284, on file at the Hamilton County Courthouse. 4. Marilyn Ott, "Martin Baum," a paper prepared for the Taft Museum In-School Program, March 1975 with a bibliography from 1977, unpublished, p. 1. 5. H.A. Ratterman, DerDeutschePionier(Cincinnati, May 1 878),p. 42. The information recorded here was derived from interviews with Baum's descendants. 6. Carl Vitz, "Benjamin Latrobe, Was He the Architect (?) of The Taft Museum," a paper presented to the Cincinnati Literary Club on March 1 5, 1954, unpublished. 7. Ott, pp. 1-4. 8. Ibid., p. 4. 9. Ibid. 10. Ibid., p. 5. 11. Henry Howe, Historical Collections of Ohio, Vol. I, from a treatise of 1 8 8 8 published by the State of Ohio in 1904, p. 817. 1 2. Charles Frederick Goss, Cincinnati, the Queen City, 1 788-1912, Vol. I (Chicago and Cincinnati, 191 2), p. 444. 13. Ott, p. 5. 14. Harriet Martineau, "A Retrospective of Western Travel," 1838, published in abbreviated form in The Taft Museum, a brochure by Walter Siple reprinted from an article in The Bulletin of the Cincinnati Art Museum, January 1933, pp. 6-7. 15. The transaction is recorded in Deed Book 24, p. 61 8 at the Hamilton County Courthouse. 16. Charles Theodore Greve, Centennial History of Cincinnati, Vol. I (Chicago, 1904), P- 54517. The transaction is recorded in Deed Book 34, p. 34, at the Hamilton County Courthouse. 1 8. Martineau, p. 6. 19. Richard Cote observed all of these inconsistencies during a careful tour of the building when he was in Cincinnati for the symposium in June 1987. 20. W.H. Martin, Map of Cincinnati for Insurance Companies and Real Estate Agents Containing Every Lot and House with Its Number Classified According to the Reference Below, Vol. II (Cincinnati, 1 8 5 5), p. 9. 21. A copy of this rare edition is in the archives of the Taft Museum. 22. Walter Siple, The Taft Museum, a brochure reprinted from an article in The Bulletin of the Cincinnati Art Museum, January 193 3, p. 14. Siple was director of the Art Museum and of the Taft Museum during the restoration. 23. Woodward Garber, "The Taft Museum," an unpublished paper, December 21, 1934, written by the son of the architect on the restoration of the Taft Museum while he was a student in architecture at Cornell University and working with his father on the remodeling, p. 16. 24. Goss, p. 444; Greve, p. 572. 2 5. Greve, Vol. II, p. 170. 26. Siple, p. 2. 27. Insurance Maps of 1 891, Cincinnati, Ohio, Vol. I (Chicago, 1 891), pp. 1 49 1-12. 28. E. Robinson and R.H. Pidgeon, Civil and Topographical Engineers, Atlas of the City of Cincinnati, Ohio from Official Records, Private Plans and Actual Surveys ( N e w York, 1883-18 84), pi. 4 . 29. Greve, Vol. I, p . 5 79. 30. Ibid. 3 1 . Ibid. THE MUSEUM NEWS PUBLISHED BY T H E AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF MUSEUMS VOL. VJ1I The Taft Residence in Cincinnati, The Museum News, published by the American Association of Museums, Vol. VIM, No. 18, March 15, 1931, the porte cochere (19101911) and the bay dormer MARCH .15, 1931 windows were removed from the exterior. No, 18 Queen City Heritage 32. Goss, p. 444. 47. Ibid., preface. 48. Carl Vitz, pp. 345-346. Schuy\cr, Architectural Record, Vol. 2 3 , 1 9 0 8 , p p . 341-346. 49. Ibid., p. 345. 3 5. Inland Architect and News Record, photogravure ed., Vol. 1 o, November 50. Talbot Hamlin, response to a letter from Carl Vitz, director of the 1 887, 70 and p. 1. This reference was discovered by Thomas J. Holleman, a Cincinnati Public Library, from Columbia University, New York City, March 3, 1954, p. 2. The letter is now in the archives of the Taft Museum. student of Charles Brownell, in 1974 and brought to my attention during 51. William Seale, The President's House, A History, White House Historical Brownell's lecture. Association, Washington, D.C., 1986. 36. Fiske Kimball, "Masterpieces of Early American Art," Artand Archaeol52. William Seale, "James Hoban—The Man and His Taste," Who was the ogy, September/October 1919, p. 297. architect of the Taft Museum? Symposium, June 1 1 and 12, 1987 (Cincinnati 37. I.T. Frary, Early Homes of Ohio (New York, 1970, reprint of 1936 1988), p. 1. edition), p. 155. 5 3. Ibid., p. 11. 38. This letter is in the Taft Museum archives. 54. Charles Brownell, "Neoclassicism, B.H. Latrobe's Domestic Architec39-Siple, p. 4. ture and the Baum-Taft House," Who was the architect of the Taft Museum? 40. Ibid. Symposium, p. 44. 41. Ibid. 5 5. Ibid., p. 48. 42. Ibid., p. 5. 56. Ibid., pp. 48-49. 43. Ibid., p. 7. $7.Ibid.,p. 56. 44. Ibid., p. 1 1. 58. Richard Cote, "Building Practices in 19th Century America," Who was 45. Ibid., p. 14. the architect of the Taft Museum ? Symposium, p. 62. 46. Woodie Garber, "The Taft Museum," p. 5. It was recently discovered 59. Ibid., p. 63. that this drawing was first published in Harper's Weekly, July, 1858. 3 3. Ibid. 34. Montgomery .. ^ E.A. Lloyd, Sketch ofSinton Residence, 1890, Cincinnati, Ohio. The Victorian entryway, which was probably installed in the mid-nineteenth century, shows small panels of glass in the lunette and is flanked by arched side lights.