User:Douglas Coldwell/Sandboxes/156
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Flat Top Manor, as it is known to the locals, is also referred to as Moses Cone Manor,the Moses H. Cone Mansion, or just Flat Top. On the Blue Ridge Parkway it is located at Milepost 294 in Blowing Rock, North Carolina. To most people that travel the Parkway it is simply the Parkway Craft Center, which is the major component of the manor house. The house is open to the public from spring through the fall (closed in the winter).
It was built by Moses H. Cone and his wife Bertha at the turn of the twentieth century.[1] Its construction was started in 1899 and finished in 1901. It has twenty-three rooms and over 13,000 square feet of living space.[2]
When Moses began acquiring land in the 1890s in the Blowing Rock area to build the house, he emulated George Vanderbilt’s Biltmore Estate in Asheville, North Carolina. Newspaper reporters of the time referred to these builders as "Farmer Cone" and "Farmer Vanderbilt". In 1898 Moses announced he was going to build a mansion in Blowing Rock that costs $25,000 when $200 would buy a habitable home in the area. Obviously this stirred up much excitement for Blowing Rock at the time. People knew this was not going to be an ordinary home, but a mansion.
The mansion is named "Flat Top" manor because of the nearness to Flat Top Mountain,[3] which Moses and Bertha also purchased. It is part of the Blue Ridge Mountains. The elevation in this area where the house is built is just at 4500 feet, while Grandfather Mountain, which is only a few miles to the south, has an elevation of around 5500 feet.[4]
The Moses H. Cone Memorial Park that contains the mansion is located between Milepost 292 and 295. The house is open to the public and there is no charge for admission. The first floor contains a Craft Center operated by the Southern Highland Handicraft Guild. It also has a National Park Service information desk and a book store. There are tours given by Park Rangers of the second story of the mansion. A visitor can sit in a rocking chair on the large veranda or walk the nearby self-guiding trail to the side of the manor house.[5] The hike around Bass Lake is the most popular. The Craft Center inside the mansion features a gift shop and a craft-person's workshop where various arts and crafts are demonstrated often (i.e. pottery, wood craving, textiles, painting, drawing, needlepoint, crocheting).
The mansion's architectural style is Victorian neo-Colonial.[6] and is an example of Colonial Revival construction of large white columns, leaded glass windows, and dormers on top of the house. At the turn of the twentieth century building the mansion with gaslights, a telephone, and central heating system was not an easy task. Building materials were hauled by horse drawn wagons from the railhead in Lenoir, North Carolina - over twenty miles away! This was the way all the fine furnishings and decorative items were brought in also to the mansion.[7]
Moses' sisters, Dr. Claribel and Miss Etta Cone, were art collectors who used some of their family's textile fortune to amass a premier collection of modern art. Their friend Gertrude Stein once visited Flat Top Manor. The artist Henri Matisse, another friend, was sent apples as a gift from the Cones that came from the estate property. The Cone Collection, with its extensive collection of Matisse and other works, is today housed in a special wing of the Baltimore Museum of Art.
[edit] References
- Blue Ridge Parkway brochure (GPO 2006 -320-369/00480) of "North Carolina / Virginia" by the National Park Service (NPS) of the U.S. Department of the Interior.
- Noblitt, Philip, A Mansion in the Mountains: The Story of Moses and Bertha Cone and Their Blowing Rock Manor, Parkway Publishers (1996), ISBN 1887905022
[edit] Footnotes
[edit] External Links
[Category:United States federal parkways]] [Category:All-American Roads]] [Category:Transportation in North Carolina]] [Category:Landmarks in North Carolina]] [Category:Landmarks in Virginia]] [Category:Appalachian culture]]