I am curious about some of the architectural details of the Atsion mansion. It seems clearly to be a Greek revival style building, which makes sense given the date it was built. Beyond that – does anyone have information on the architect or designer? Was it built from a pattern book, or is it too early for that?
I’d assume that the smaller houses in the village were constructed by builders without formal architectural training. It would be interesting to find out how and by whom the mansion was designed and architected.
Enoch:
You are correct about the 1826 mansion’s architectural style being Greek Revival. Regarding the architect for the structure, you ask a most excellent question and I do not have a ready answer for you. I believe past historians have explored this issue without success. However, a brief search for potential source material yields three prospective collections:
Atsion Iron Works Collection at the Burlington County Historical Society, Burlington, New Jersey—9 boxes of bound volumes and some loose papers.
Richards Family Papers at Special Collections, Alexander Library, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey—1.2 cubic feet of manuscript material.
Samuel Richards Papers, Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania—about 400 items dating from 1787 to 1845.
I have viewed the Burlington County Historical Society and the Historical Society of Pennsylvania material, but I sought other information at that time and I cannot remember whether these two collections contain any information on the Atsion Mansion—but it wouldn’t surprise me!
As you suggest, the smaller houses represent the work of an artisan master carpenter and he likely did not work from formal plans.
Best regards,
Jerseyman