Port
Townsend Historical Sites
History > Historic
Homes
Name: Ann Starrett House
Year Built: 1889
Location: 744 Clay Street
Area: Uptown Port Townsend
This mansion is now a bed-and -breakfast inn and hosts frequent "mystery
weekends" on stormy winter evenings, an appropriate activity for
this archetypal Victorian.
Built by George Starrett, one of Port Townsend's most prolific home builders,
this is a Victorian residence of national stature. Its architecture is
unique, and the free-hung circular stairway, a "two-tier free-floating
staircase," is believed by the Smithsonian Institute to be the last
of its kind in America. The domed ceiling in the staircase tower has a
fresco that depicts the four seasons and the four virtues, in eight panels.
The house was built at a cost of $6,000 as a wedding gift for Starrett's
wife Ann.
Starrett once bragged to the local newspaper that he had built 350 homes
by 1889. A native of Maine, he settled in Port Townsend in his late 20s.
He established himself as a carpenter, builder, contractor, and brick
manufacturer, with his workshop at Point Hudson. He later operated a sawmill
obtained from George Downs at Point Hudson. At a time when $2,000 would
build a substantial residence, the Starrett House was a extravagance and
a tribute to Starrett's profession. In his book, Victorian Architecture
of Port Townsend, Allen Dennison wrote: "The architecture of
this house is truly remarkable in the originality of its concept and the
successful integration of diverse elements into an imposing and harmonious
mass, which make it not only of local, but of national significance."
Seattle artist Otto Chapman painted the fresco in the tower. The dining
room and parlor also have original frescoed ceilings, which have required
only minimal retouching. The interior has elaborate moldings and features
door moldings of carved lions, doves, and ferns.
The eight-sided tower ceiling is actually a solar calender. Small dormer
windows are perfectly situated so that on the first day of the new season
the sun shines on the ruby red glass in the center, causing a red beam
to point toward the appropriate panel of the Four Seasons frescoes.
Originally the tower was topped by a weather vane. The windows of the
third floor landing, together with the railing, form an indoor widow's
walk. A feature seldom noted is the variety of exterior trim. No gable
went without adornment such as stars, sunrise, scrolls, and harps, some
more elaborate than others.
In what may seem like a curious omission, the house was built without
fireplaces. Instead, the latest technology was used: stoves and central
heating. Not having a fireplace was prestigious.
See also: Ann
Starrett Mansion
Some data modified from the National
Register Information System. Many descriptions used by permission
of the Port Townsend Chamber of Commerce. All material copyrighted by
PTguide.com.
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