Burt-Stark Mansion
Burt-Stark Mansion
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Stark House
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Location
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306 N. Main St., Abbeville, South
Carolina
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Area
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3.5 acres
(1.4 ha)[2]
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Built
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1865
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Architect
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Lesley,David; Cubic
(slave)
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Architectural style
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Greek Revival
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Significant dates
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Added to NRHP
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April 3, 1970[1]
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Designated NHL
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October 5, 1992[3]
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The Burt-Stark
Mansion, also known as Armistead Burt House, in Abbeville, South
Carolina was the site of the last Council of War of cabinet members
of the Confederate government. On May 2, 1865, Jefferson Davis, hoping to continue the struggle,
met unanimous opposition, and realized the Confederate independence cause was
lost.
It was declared
a National Historic
Landmark in 1992, specifically for being where Jefferson Davis had
his last council of war.
History
The property
has had seven owners. The original owner, David Lesley, owned it until his
death in 1855. He had hired a man named Johnson, an English landscaper, to
organize the property. The next owner was a Presbyterian pastor named Thomas A.
Hoyt, who owned it until 1859 when he was sent to another church in Louisville, Kentucky.
A banker from Charleston, South
Carolina, Andrew Simonds, bought it from Hoyt, and in 1862 sold it
to Armistead Burt, who owned it when Jefferson Davis
used the building.
Davis' wife, Varina Davis, had met Armistead Burt when
Jefferson Davis first entered the United States Congress
in December 1845. Burt invited Varina Davis and her children to his house, as
Varina was sent away from Richmond, Virginia
for her protection. Varina pointed out to Burt that Union soldiers might
eventually burn his house for harboring her, but he said there would be no
greater cause then for his house to be burnt for. Varina moved to the Mansion
on April 17. Days later, after Varina had left to go further South, Davis came
to the house.
On May 2, 1865,
between four and six in the afternoon, Jefferson Davis held his final war
council, with Secretary of war John C. Breckinridge
and several military officers, most notable of them Braxton Bragg and Basil W. Duke. Davis wanted to continue the
fighting, using the forces still plentiful west of the Mississippi River, but the others disagreed. When
Davis asked the men why they were still there then, they replied it was to make
sure Davis got to safety. After fuming for a minutes, Davis resigned himself to
the decision of the others, effectively ending the existence of the Confederate State
of America. However, the last land Confederate force to surrender
would not be until June 24, when Stand Watie surrendered in Oklahoma; the last Confederate vessel surrendered
at Liverpool later that year. After the Abbeville meeting, the Cabinet, Davis;
a three thousand strong protective force, and the treasury of the Confederacy
dispersed.
After the war,
in 1868 Burt had to sell the house due to bankruptcy. A local planter, James R.
Norwood, bought it; when he died in 1875, his widow and daughter inherited it.
James Samuel Stark bought it from them in 1900, and with his wife restored the
building. On their death, their daughter Mary Stark Davis inherited it. After
Davis died in the Fall of 1987, Abbeville Historic Preservation Commission was
given control of the house, and have operated tours of it ever since.
The house is a
white Greek Revival style two story house with a frame
structure and lap siding. A front pedimented portico, also two stories high, is supported by
four square columns. Underneath this is a small wooden latticework second-story
balcony. It has a brick foundation, with wooden walls. The roof is
made of aluminum and tin,
with both asphalt and cedar shingles. The shutters on all the windows are
original. There were several exterior buildings, but the only one still
standing is the kitchen; the other building once on the property were a
carriage house, cow barn, milk house, smokehouse, and well house. Spacious
rooms and high ceilings mark the interior. A central great hall with an Adam
fanlight is the main entrance to the domicile, with a drawing room on each
side. The left drawing room would be where Jefferson Davis would hold his final
war council with John C. Breckinridge,
his Secretary of War, and senior military officials. Before the War, the wide
double doors would open to create a ballroom from the entire front area. The
only additions to the house after the War was a bathroom and a northwest corner
wing, which provided extra kitchen space. Most of the furnishings are from the
1850s and 1860s.
It was built in
the 1830s by David Lesley, a local attorney, judge, planter, and Presbyterian Church elder. Lesley had seen a
house in the north that he liked, and chose that house as the prototype for his
own. He sent a man named Cubic, a slave that was also a master carpenter, to
look at the prototype house, and he then oversaw construction of Lesley's
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