Showing posts with label George Rogers Clark. Show all posts
Showing posts with label George Rogers Clark. Show all posts

Friday, July 5, 2013

Locust Grove Meets Jane Austen

Locust Grove
Built in 1790

It was a soggy Independence Day but I refused to be daunted and my visit to Locust Grove, one time home of George Rogers Clark, was quite a treat. Isn't it wonderful that some of these historic homes - this one was built in 1790 - have been preserved? And, the volunteers who take the time to familiarize themselves with the stories of the people who lived in them make the long-dead occupants come alive again.

I guess because it was such a rainy day, not too many people came out to take advantage of free admission to the house, so I had one volunteer, Jason, all to myself. He was on fire with the stories of Lucy Clark Groghan (George's sister), and her husband, William who had the brick house built on their 700-acre farm. 

We chatted for a long time in the room in which George Rogers Clark spent the final years of his life - from 1809 to 1819. By the time he came to live at Locust Grove, Jason told me, he was in poor health. He had had a stroke and due to a bad burn, one of his legs had been amputated. There was a ladderback chair in his room that had been outfitted with small wheels and since Clark's room was on the ground floor, he could get around to the dining room and the parlor and the estate office. 

I also learned that one of Lucy and William's sons, John Croghan, studied medicine under founding father and physician Benjamin Rush and in 1839 he bought Mammoth Cave and opened a tuberculosis clinic there. The thought at the time was that the constant cool temperature - about 54 degrees - would be restorative to patients.  It didn't work out and the hospital was only open a few months. 

Three presidents - Monroe, Taylor, and Jackson - all were guests in the home as well as artist John James Audubon.

I was surprised that there were no bookshelves in the house. William Croghan was a land surveyor - he and GRC were partners - and I thought maybe he would have had shelves built in. Although there were some odd books lying about, none of them had been actual possessions of the family. 

I learned that a couple of literary events are scheduled to be held on the grounds this summer. The sixth annual Jane Austen Festival will be happening July 20 and 21 and will celebrate the bicentennial of Pride and Prejudice. Last year, 1700 people attended workshops, a Regency fashion show, and afternoon tea. This year, there will be a reading marathon of P&P on the porch of the house.

In even better news, Locust Grove's summer used book sale is coming up in August. I have spent many a penny at these twice-a-year sales and have found some wonderful bargains. You can be sure the book sale dates are marked on my calendar.

Thursday, July 4, 2013

An Independence Day Visit to a Historic Home

George Rogers Clark
1752-1818

To celebrate the Fourth of July, Independence Day in America, I am going to visit a historic home, Locust Grove, which was built here in the late 1700s by Lucy Clark and her husband William Croghan. Lucy was the sister of George Rogers Clark who is credited with founding our fair city and who was a hero of the Revolutionary War. He died in 1818 and spent the final nine years of his life with the Croghans at Locust Grove. 

His younger brother, William Clark, is the Clark of the Lewis and Clark Expedition commissioned by President Thomas Jefferson to explore the western part of the country from the Mississippi River to the Pacific Ocean. Both men stopped at Locust Grove in 1806 after returning from their explorations.

I have a copy of the Journals of Lewis and Clark published as part of National Geographic's Adventure Classics series. I have not read it, but I do like reading journals and diaries. This just may be the year!

I have never visited the house, which is on the National Historic Register, and today the home and the grounds are open and free to the public.  I will take advantage of the opportunity to explore this part of Kentucky and American history.