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Talamore at Oak Terrace - Club
History
James W. Hilty
III. McKean Manor House - Pine
Ridge
Henry Pratt McKean named his manor house “Pine Ridge,” apparently because the
house was built on the upper ridge of the Comly farm bordered by a line of
pines, likely planted by McKean, some of which still stand. Pine Ridge is a
gothic
styled country mansion following the shape of luxurious English manor houses,
with two large wings framing an open courtyard and carriage turnaround in the
front. In 1986 Professor George Thomas, a distinguished architectural historian
at the University of Pennsylvania, described the McKean manor house as “one of
the last surviving and best preserved grand houses of the turn of the century in
the Philadelphia region.” The building, according to Thomas, was “probably”
designed by noted architect Horace Trumbauer and erected “around 1904.”
Trumbauer's work ledgers indicate that he performed major redesign work on the
manor house in 1908 and that, quite importantly, he was the architect of record
for the 1904 construction of the McKean carriage house (discussed below).
However, there is no direct evidence of his involvement in the original design
of Pine Ridge.
Oddly enough, given the McKean family tradition of patronizing Philadelphia's
most important architects, no architect of record for Pine Ridge is listed in
any of the available sources where one usually finds such information. Perhaps
the information is simply lost to history.
Another explanation is that the McKean manor house may not be an original design
at all, but rather, an expensive expansion and renovation of the Kneedler-Comly
farmhouse. Important evidence of the latter comes from Edward Matthews, a
contemporary observer who regularly published detailed accounts of area real
estate transactions and new construction projects in the Ambler Gazette.
Matthews wrote that the Kneedler-Comly homestead, “that ancient farm house,” as
he called it, “has been transformed [by McKean] into a handsome residence.”
The Kneedler-Comly homestead likely was expanded into the McKean manor house
through major renovations in 1894, or ten years earlier than estimated by
Professor Thomas. County tax records and newspaper accounts indicate the McKeans
moved onto the Comly-Kneedler property and into the homestead in 1894. McKean
was assessed for two new houses built on the property in 1894, one apparently
for his estate manager and the other probably being the renovations to the
homestead, which apparently were so extensive as to represent a "new" building,
as far as the County tax assessors were concerned. No other new building
assessments or other records exist to indicate any further construction on the
property until 1904, when a stable-carriage house is built, and 1908, when
Trumbauer completed renovations to the existing manor house. Moreover, we know
from newspaper reports that the McKeans were living on the property and were
philanthropically engaged in the Ambler community well before 1904. Thus, the
manor house had to have been either originally constructed in 1894 (by an
unknown architect) or the product that year of major renovations to the
Comly-Kneedler homestead.
Eventually the manor house was expanded to 52 rooms and over 23,000 square feet,
but other details regarding its original construction remain obscure.
Indications that the manor house was constructed atop the older Comly-Kneedler
house are not readily apparent today, perhaps permanently masked by Trumbauer's
1908 renovations.
McKean's manor house, Pine Ridge is late gothic revival style architecture,
similar to the great English country houses, constructed of a dark read brick
exterior, with contrasting limestone windowsills and lintels, slate roof, and a
now-enclosed porch across the back. The interior features richly appointed oak
paneling, a vaulted vestibule, and a multi-level front stair hall. Ornamented
plaster ceilings, oval panels, and fine oak millwork are found throughout the
first floor. The upper floors are not as decorous or elaborately finished, but
the quality of appointments is unmistakably elegant and there is a fireplace in
nearly every room.
The McKean estate, Pine Run Farms was known for its beautiful shrubbery and
trees, particularly fine specimens of golden beech and oaks, none of which, as
it happens, are included in the Montgomery County Inventory of Historic and
Cultural Resources. To make the grounds suitable for his favorite sport,
cross-country riding, McKean ordered the clearing, leveling, and contouring of
large portions of the property (thus inadvertently making it easier later to
construct a golf course). Additionally, McKean managed the water run-off problem
by installing a sophisticated network of large ceramic tiles and culverts, many
of which were uncovered during the construction of Talamore golf course and some
of which still function today as McKean originally intended.
Virtually no records remain of what life was like at Pine Ridge. But clearly the
McKean estate was part of an interlocking community of privileged, elite country
estates, all early twentieth-century playgrounds for Philadelphia's ultra rich.
Henry Pratt McKean's farm lay between the Henry McKean Ingersoll estate (then
called "Annandale Farms") and the estate of McKean's sister, Phebe Warren McKean
Downs, who married Dr. Norton Downs, a Germantown physician. In 1906 Dr. Downs
commissioned Horace Trumbauer to design and build a large manor house at the
corner of Welsh Road and Butler Pike (now the site of the Horsham Clinic).
The Downs estate, known as "Fordhooke Farm," was connected to the McKean and
Ingersoll estates by a private, tree-lined carriage road roughly paralleling
Welsh Road. The carriage road appears in the 1893 Atlas of Montgomery Country
and the 1934 Franklin Survey. The recent (2004) construction at Greystone
Estates has obliterated remaining traces of the carriage road on the other side
of Tennis Avenue. Remnants of carriage road can be seen on the Talamore side of
Tennis Avenue, beginning with the driveway to St. Matthew's Church, following to
the van Steenwyk house, then following along Park Creek past Oak Terrace Farms
up to the main residence. Talamore residents along Glendevon Drive may still
glimpse vestiges of the old carriage road and the overgrown sycamore-lined
McKean riding trails near their properties.
Chapters
I. Earliest History
II. Pine Run Farms - The McKean Estate
III. McKean Manor House - Pine Ridge IV. Horace Trumbauer and Talamore at Oak Terrace
V. Scandal and the Declension of the McKeans
VI. Pine Run Country Club and Alexander Findlay
-- Brushing Against Golf Immortality
VII. Bankers' and the Great Depression.
VIII. Oak Terrace - The Wingel Years
IX. The “Old Oak”.
X. “Slammin' Sammy” Snead Comes to Oak Terrace.
XI. Location, Location, Location
XII. Oak Terrace - The “Bud” Hansen
Years.
XIII. Talamore at Oak Terrace - Realen and Bob Levy,
Jr.
XIV. Talamore at Oak Terrace: The making of a golf
course
XV. The switchover, 1993-1995:
XVI. THE END OF THE BEGINNING |
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