File:Albion W. Tourgée House, Mayville, New York - 20220112.jpg

Original file (3,937 × 2,361 pixels, file size: 4.29 MB, MIME type: image/jpeg)

Summary

Description
English: The Albion W. Tourgée House, 96 South Erie Street, Mayville, New York, January 2022. An absolutely magnificent Italian Villa-style mansion erected in 1881, the Tourgée House's design incorporates superlative examples of most of the style's defining features: a three-story central tower with double-windowed belvedere and a shallow-pitched, finial-topped pyramidal roof, half-width front porch that encloses and entrance topped by an unusual fanlight with elegant tracery, an octagonal projecting bay dominating the left side of the façade with quatrefoil designs above the windows, and - perhaps the most eye-catching element of the design - widely overhanging eaves undergirded by extremely prominent decorative brackets. A native of Ohio, Albion Winegar Tourgée (1838-1905) was among the most prominent jurists, politicians, writers, and civil rights activists of the period immediately after the American Civil War: after a dozen years spent in North Carolina during which he served as an influential Republican political figure and district court judge and earned the ire of the Ku Klux Klan, Tourgée's parallel success as a novelist (his bestsellers A Fool's Errand, by One of the Fools and Bricks Without Straw, published in 1879 and 1880 respectively, were unusual in their chronicling of Reconstruction-era Southern life from the point of view of freed slaves and so-called "carpetbaggers" from the Northern states, such as Tourgée himself) enabled him to retire to Mayville in 1881, where he lived uneventfully at first. However, the culmination of his legacy was yet to come: in 1891, he came out of retirement to aid the New Orleans Citizens' Committee in their opposition to the new Louisiana state law segregating rail transportation in the state, and later served as the attorney representing Homer Plessy, the African-American man who unsuccessfully challenged that law in the famous Supreme Court case of Plessy v. Ferguson. Tourgée moved out of the house in 1900, when President William McKinley appointed him to a post at the U.S. consulate in Bordeaux, where he served until his death.
Date
Source Own work
Author Andre Carrotflower
Camera location42° 15′ 05.16″ N, 79° 30′ 03.98″ W  Heading=49.98583984375° Kartographer map based on OpenStreetMap.View this and other nearby images on: OpenStreetMapinfo

Licensing

I, the copyright holder of this work, hereby publish it under the following license:
w:en:Creative Commons
attribution share alike
This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license.
You are free:
  • to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work
  • to remix – to adapt the work
Under the following conditions:
  • attribution – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use.
  • share alike – If you remix, transform, or build upon the material, you must distribute your contributions under the same or compatible license as the original.

Captions

Add a one-line explanation of what this file represents

Items portrayed in this file

depicts

12 January 2022

42°15'5.159"N, 79°30'3.982"W

heading: 49.98583984375 degree

0.00059594755661501787 second

4.25 millimetre

image/jpeg

35c3aa284df37649c530702824e7633f80eb7cb6

4,498,714 byte

2,361 pixel

3,937 pixel

File history

Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.

Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current05:32, 25 January 2022Thumbnail for version as of 05:32, 25 January 20223,937 × 2,361 (4.29 MB)Andre CarrotflowerUploaded own work with UploadWizard

The following page uses this file:

Metadata