Sunday, August 29, 2010

Jacobean Revival in Memphis, TN

Carrier Hall, Memphis, Tennessee
Facade

This Spring I was fortunate enough to tour this iconic home in the heart of Central Gardens in Memphis, TN.  Currently, the home is FOR SALE, but was once the residence of famed Memphis Interior Designer, William R. Eubanks.  Hence, when the opportuntiy made itself available for me to take the grand tour I gladly accepted.  Below you will see pictures of various rooms in the house, each filled with remarkable detailing and the finest building elements.  Enjoy, as this home is simply magnificent!  Grandeur would be an understatement, as this is a rare gem. 

Circa 1926 Jacobean Revival in Central Gardens, Memphis, TN.

 When Robert M. Carrier moved his family from New York to Memphis in 1926, he sent his architect, Bryant Fleming, on a buying trip to England to gather elements for the house he was building here. Fleming had worked with W. J. Dodd, who designed the Hunter Raine house in 1904, just around the corner on Central. He also designed Cheekwood, built in Nashville in the early 1930s. It wasn't a pewter tankard or two, nor even Wedgwood service for 24 that he had in mind.

Early Tudor mantels ornamented with mythical beasts, rooms of fine wood paneling, and a museum-worthy collection of paintings on glass to be incorporated in the leaded casement windows are part of what Fleming acquired on his grand tour. The resulting house feels like it could have been built during the late 16th or early 17th century in East Anglia.



Fleming was an accomplished landscape architect, and he designed the site to provide a stunning milieu for the house, siting it on the mid-level of a three-tiered plot with its main entrance on the rear, off a central garden court. The street front has a magnificent brick and stone balustraded terrace looking west over a sunken lawn.


Lawn View

The interior details are as sumptuous as you could imagine and then some. The entry and living room are floored in a checkerboard of antique marble and slate. The ceilings are beamed with antique timbers. The formal rooms have plaster ceilings with ornate strapwork and decorative pendants. The great hall, library, and sitting rooms have walls of hand-carved paneling. These include full-relief figures and bas-relief masks on the over-mantels. Every surface is rich with historical detail.

Library
Hand painted panels in the lead glass windows

Limestone Mantel,  Lead Glass Windows, 10" plank floors

The kitchen is a spacious room with recently redone glazed cabinetry. Granite tops, tumbled marble backsplashes, and a limestone floor with inset slate diamonds equal the quality of the original materials in other parts of the house. The kitchen is large enough to hold a comfortable seating area; a separate breakfast room and dining porch overlook the entry garden court.


Kitchen

The detailing isn't spared upstairs, with the same eight- and 10-inch-wide oak floors found in the great hall and the dining room. The master suite has a manorial bedroom, a morning room, two dressing rooms, and two baths. The other bedrooms aren't bad, either. There is a guest house across the garden court and a pool and tea house on the uppermost level.

Dining Room

Pool

Probably no other house in Memphis is built with such richness of architectural elements. One step inside this house and the elegant assemblage of historical relics will make you feel as if you're embarking on a grand tour of your own.

text by: John Griffin

Additional Photos:

Study

Smoking Room with Relief Plaster work in Ceiling


Sleeping Quarters with Timber Detailing
Living Salon


Front Entrance Gate

Photos compliments of:  Trulia and The Commercial Appeal




1 comment:

  1. How lucky you got a tour! I lived in Memphis for a while and I remember this house!

    ReplyDelete