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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Construction  





2 Decline  





3 Restoration  





4 References  














Whitehaven (Paducah, Kentucky)







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Coordinates: 37°33N 88°3910W / 37.05083°N 88.65278°W / 37.05083; -88.65278
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Whitehaven

U.S. National Register of Historic Places

Whitehaven, 2016
Whitehaven (Paducah, Kentucky) is located in Kentucky
Whitehaven (Paducah, Kentucky)

Whitehaven (Paducah, Kentucky) is located in the United States
Whitehaven (Paducah, Kentucky)

LocationLone Oak Road, off I-24, Paducah, Kentucky
Coordinates37°3′3N 88°39′10W / 37.05083°N 88.65278°W / 37.05083; -88.65278
Built1865, 1907
ArchitectA. L. Lassiter
Architectural styleClassical revival
NRHP reference No.84001824 [1]
Added to NRHP1984

Whitehaven (the Anderson-Smith House) is a historic plantation house in Paducah, Kentucky, in use since 1983 as the Kentucky welcome centeronInterstate 24 (I-24) near the state border with Illinois.[2] It is the only historic house in the United States also used as a rest area.[3] The house was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on March 1, 1984.

Construction[edit]

In 1865, tobacco dealer Edward L. Anderson completed construction of a simple two-story, brick farmhouse, the bricks for which had been fired in a pit on the grounds.[4] The house remained in the Anderson family until sold to a local businessman, Edward Lafayette Atkins, in 1903. Atkins commissioned his friend, architect Alda Lafayette Lassiter to remodel the house in the Classical Revival style. Lassiter added a grand staircase, elaborate plaster ceilings with crown molding, and a large portico with eight Corinthian columns. The house was painted white, and Atkins named it Whitehaven.[5]

In 1908, after the death of Atkins' wife, Atkins sold the house to James P. Smith, mayor of Paducah. The Smiths made many changes, hiring Marshall Fields to do interior decorating. Smith added a storm shelter in the back yard and converted the attic into additional bedrooms for their six children.[6] Nell Smith changed the name of the now 22-room house to "Bide-A-Wee" ("Stay awhile") to honor her Scottish heritage, and she and her daughter created formal gardens on the property.[7]

Decline[edit]

The last member of the Smith family moved out of the house in 1968, and it was left with caretakers who seem to have both abused the house and sold fixtures from it. After the caretakers themselves moved out in 1979, vandals broke every remaining pane of glass but one, and water damage rotted ceilings, floors, and portico. A portion of the east wall collapsed.[8][9]

Restoration[edit]

In 1981 the Smith family sold the 32-acre (13 ha) parcel to Paducah Junior College, which planned to use the property in expanding the college. The college did not want to demolish the house, but it did not have the money to restore it either. Later that year, Governor John Y. Brown Jr. and Secretary of Transportation Frank Metts decided that the house could serve as the I-24 welcome center. There was opposition from other tourism-dependent counties, which wanted a modern welcome center nearer the Interstate and the Ohio River and believed that restoring the mansion benefited Paducah and McCracken County at the expense of other nearby tourist areas.[10]

After a brief archaeological investigation, the house was carefully restored using as much original material as possible.[11] The kitchen wing was partially demolished and the remainder adapted to serve as a welcome center, with restrooms, information desk, and storage areas. Three outbuildings — the gazebo, storm shelter, and carriage house — were also saved and repurposed. Part of the second floor of the house was devoted to displaying memorabilia of Vice President Alben Barkley (1877–1956). The welcome center, renamed "Whitehaven," was officially opened on June 23, 1983.[12]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 15, 2008.
  • ^ "Whitehaven Welcome Center Celebrates 40th Anniversary". WPSD-TV. June 24, 2023. Retrieved June 24, 2023.
  • ^ PorterBriggs.com
  • ^ National Register nomination form. A separate brick kitchen was built behind the house.
  • ^ National Register nomination form. At this time, the area between the main house and the kitchen was enclosed and made into a butler's pantry.
  • ^ Nomination form. "Double dormer windows were installed to provide light to this area. The walls of the play area were stenciled in an Oriental motif with pagodas and willow trees."
  • ^ Holland, Richard (1989). Whitehaven: Rebirth of a Southern Mansion. Kuttawa, Kentucky: McClanahan Publishing House. pp. 11–28.
  • ^ Holland (1989), pp. 29–33.
  • ^ Nomination form. "[T]he house took on a ghostly, abandoned appearance reminiscent of a scene out of a William Faulkner novel."
  • ^ "Smith Mansion plan is attractive". Paducah Sun. April 12, 1982.[page needed]
  • ^ Holland (1989), pp. 49–98.
  • ^ Holland (1989), pp. 99–115, 131–133.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Whitehaven_(Paducah,_Kentucky)&oldid=1208246802"

    Categories: 
    National Register of Historic Places in McCracken County, Kentucky
    Buildings and structures in Paducah, Kentucky
    Houses in McCracken County, Kentucky
    Rest areas in the United States
    Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in Kentucky
    Neoclassical architecture in Kentucky
    Interstate 24
    Borders of Kentucky
    Transportation in McCracken County, Kentucky
    1865 establishments in Kentucky
    Houses completed in 1865
    Hidden categories: 
    Pages using gadget WikiMiniAtlas
    Articles using NRISref without a reference number
    Wikipedia articles needing page number citations from June 2022
    Articles with short description
    Short description is different from Wikidata
    Coordinates on Wikidata
     



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