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Tarva Plantation 1850

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Page 1: Tarva Plantation 1850 - Plantation Services Real Estate Impressions by JD Myle… · S cale is the key word when considering Tarva Plantation. There is of course the scale of the

Tarva Plantation 1850

Page 2: Tarva Plantation 1850 - Plantation Services Real Estate Impressions by JD Myle… · S cale is the key word when considering Tarva Plantation. There is of course the scale of the
Page 3: Tarva Plantation 1850 - Plantation Services Real Estate Impressions by JD Myle… · S cale is the key word when considering Tarva Plantation. There is of course the scale of the

Scale is the key word when considering Tarva Plantation. There is of course the scale of the property: some five thousand acres of pine wood, live oaks, a pond that any-where but South Georgia would be called a lake, springs, thickets, sweet gums that look like cypresses, waves of sedge, and miles of roads which lead from one beautiful

wild scene to another. There is the scale of the properties in the neighborhood. The scale of these places is described in numbers of acres which most folk think of only in terms of national parks. When one considers the total amount of land devoted to hunting plantations in Baker and Dougherty counties, the numbers are more like those used to describe military reservations. In fact, one can ride the main road from Albany to Newton and for 15 of its 20 miles, three plantations pass endlessly on either side. This amount of open land under management lends the area a feel rarely available on the eastern side of the Mississippi and much of it, including Tarva, is subject to conserva-tion easements which will protect it in per-petuity. Then there is the scale of the house. It is simple and not large by many standards but, oh, what scale. There is a freedom of movement inside this house which is at once rooted in 19th century necessities and remarkably modern in conception. It has the almost mystical feel of the local pecan groves which share its unrelenting symme-try. There was no modern conceit of con-necting the house to nature. Rather, with its massive doors and windows, one seems to still be outside among the oaks. Tarva received its name from 2oth century owners who heard this pronuncia-tion of the family name Tarver. There were Tarvers in the area from the beginning. One source says that Hartwell H. Tarver accom-panied Nelson Tift on his trip to establish a trading post and lay out the town of Albany in 1836. Hartwell Tarver was from Brunswick County, Virginia, and settled in Twiggs County, southeast of Macon. He amassed several thousand acres in Baker County following the Bat-tle of Chickasawachee Swamp earlier that year. Along the way, he was made a General of the Georgia Militia, served as postmaster of Tarversville, sired eight children by two wives, and at his death in 1851 was considered one of the wealthiest men in Georgia. It is unknown how Hartwell Tarver’s lands were divided at his death as the Twiggs County Courthouse burned in 1901. However, he is said to have built houses for three of his children in what was then Baker County. The two in Baker County survive in pristine condi-tion. The third was built in what after 1853 became Dougherty County.

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The first, Pinebloom, was built for daughter Dollie who in 1848 married Alfred H. Colquitt, governor of Georgia from 1876 to 1882. Three miles north, he built a house for his son, Henry Andrew. The house is said to have been a wedding present for Henry who married Elizabeth Griffen Solomon in 1850. Tarva’s given date of construction relies on this tradition. Henry Andrew Tarver (1826-1897) had been in Baker County since at least 1847 when he was appointed to serve on a committee for advancing the construction of a road in District 8 of the county which included the land which became Tarva. According to the 1850 census, he was a prominent planter owning 700 acres of improved and 3000 acres of unimproved

land worked by 55 slaves. He served on grand juries in 1855 and 1861. After the War Between the States, he was elected to the Georgia Legis-lature in 1872. His service in the legisla-ture prompted the Tarvers to move to Atlan-ta and to treat the plantation as a summer

home. An 1886 article in the Albany Patriot reported that the Misses Cutliff had gone for a short visit “to the attractive country house of Col. H. A. Tarver of Baker County.” Although Tarver served only one term in the General Assembly, the family likely enjoyed the gover-norship of his brother-in-law. When the Tarvers returned from Atlanta in 1887, they took up residence in Albany. Henry, or H. A. as he was called, and Elizabeth, known as Fannie, had eight chil-dren, one of whom was Henry Andrew, Jr. It is not clear how the plantation was di-vided among those surviving at the first Henry’s death in 1897 but the plantation house passed to Henry Andrew, Jr. Also known as H. A., he was born in 1865 at Tar-va. He graduated from Emory College in 1884 and returned to Albany. His marriage to Frances Welborn Holcombe in November of 1892 was described as a “Brilliant So-cial Event” in a full column article on the front page of the Albany Weekly Herald. Henry progressed in local politics from Deputy Clerk of Dougherty County to Coun-ty Treasurer to Alderman of the City of Albany to Mayor for three terms. Albany’s Munici-pal Auditorium is a lasting monument to his years of leadership. Prior to his death in 1935, he was encouraging preparations for the centennial of the city his grandfather had helped lay out. Henry was not the only Tarver to take an active part in local affairs. His

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younger brother, Owen Fort, was elected repeatedly without opposition as Dougherty Coun-ty Sheriff, an office in which he was serving at the time of his death in 1944. During this period little is known about the ongoing operation and actual ownership of today’s Tarva but Fort was the last Tarver to own the house. The second Henry died intestate, no will is listed in the Dougherty County indices for the first Henry, and any record of Hartwell’s will, if he had one, went up in flames in 1901. To further confuse things, a portion of the plantation passed to a sister of the first Henry, Ann Tarv-er Hobbs, and to her d a u gh te r, Mary De-c o u r s e y H o b b s Jones. One clue lies in the will of the first H e n r y ’ s wife, Eliz-abeth, who in 1909 di-rected that Fort’s share be directed to the sec-ond Henry. Tarva was reassembled by Russell A. Alger, Jr., beginning in 1941 when he purchased the house and 1296 acres from Fort Tarver. He conveyed this property to his father’s trustee who in the same year purchased the 1743 acre tract which included Mrs. Jones’ interest for $8.00 per acre. The final tract of 1427 acres which had been owned by the Reynolds Brothers Lumber Company was purchased in 1945. It is as difficult to keep the various Russell Algers straight as the Henry Tarvers. The Russell who bought the Tarver Place was actually the third of the group and had a son by the same name. They all hailed from Michigan where the first, a major general in the Union army, built a successful lumber business and served as Michigan governor, Secretary of War under President McKinley, and was a U. S. Senator at the time of his death. His son Russell was one of the initial investors in the Packard Motor Car Company and built a mansion in Grosse Pointe designed by Charles A. Platt, the New York architect best known for his de-sign of the Freer Gallery in Washington, D.C. His son Russell grew up in that house, mar-ried Phoebe Bailey of New York, had a son named Russell, and bought Tarva. Knowing a good architect when he saw one, Alger retained Edward Vason Jones (1909-1980), to restore Tarva. Jones was trained as a dentist but his love was architecture and his first building was the lodge at Gillionville Plantation. That effort led to a four year stint with Hentz Adler & Schutze where he worked with highly regarded classicist, Philip Trammell Schutze from 1938 to 1942. After designing ships in Savannah for the war, Jones

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opened his Albany practice in 1945. It ultimately led him to the State Department’s Diplo-matic Reception Rooms and the White House where his work achieved national recognition. Jones’ calling cards were a deep respect for the classical architecture of South Georgia and restraint. He used both for the Algers at Tarva. The Algers did not stay long at Tarva, selling to Mary Haskell Hunter of Cleveland, Ohio, in 1947. Mrs. Hunter was the granddaughter of Howard Melville Hanna, a brother of

the more famous Marcus Alonzo or Mark Hanna. Howard joined his brother in forming the M. A. Hanna Co., now Polyone Corp. He was involved in shipping and oil, eventually selling his ener-gy interests to Standard Oil of Ohio. Various family members owned hunting properties near Thomasville. Russell Alger and Mary Hunter may have been acquaint-ed through their grandfathers’ connections with President McKinley or Mrs. Hunter may have simply been smitten with Tarva. However she ended up in Baker County rather than in Thomasville, once she came, she

held the property until her death in 1972. During her ownership, she continued work with Jones and later with Frank McCall of Moultrie on renovating the kitchen. She collected numerous antiques and brought an aunt’s collection of ruby glass to add to the charm of the place. She named it Tarva, ostensibly because everyone pronounced it like that anyway. Her will left her real property, including a horse farm near Lexington, Kentucky, and a ranch in Missoula, Montana, to her daughter, Barbara. Barbara Hunter’s passion was breeding and racing thoroughbreds at her Brownwood Farm. In a 2010 article about Brownwood in the racing publication, BloodHorse, her farm manager was quoted as saying, “She’s not much on changing things.” So it was at Tarva. Things continued on for the next forty years pretty much as they had for the prior twen-ty-five. Since Ms. Hunter’s death in 2012, the current owners have worked to bring Tarva up to date without sacrificing its inherent charms. Much of that charm derives from the scale of the place. Rather than replicating the Greek temples others were building in the 1850s, the Tarvers chose a form ultimately derived from the “cottages” of Louisiana and the tropics. The house is a one story structure with porch supported by square posts spanning the facade, all under a relatively low hip roof. The entry and its mates on both sides of the house feature wide, four-panel, double doors with transoms and sidelights, the latter aligned with the panes of the other windows. The entrance has the only trim in the house truly in the Greek mode with its fluted pilasters and entablature, and the porch posts are spread at

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the center to allow a full view of it. The fully turned balusters of the porch railing contrast with the simplicity of the posts. The remarkable thing about the house is the cross hall which opens to porches on either side of the house. The intersection of the two halls is reflected in the diagonals of the wide pine flooring, reminiscent of the crossing in a cruciform church. At the corners of these halls, four equal size rooms with ceil-ings over fifteen feet high and fireplaces in interior chimneys provide twin parlors, the dining room, and the principal bedroom. The parlors open off the hall through high double doors and each features four win-dows. Those facing the front of the house extend to the floor. These room have large plaster medallions and elaborate cornices rising from an egg-and-dart molding and including a grapevine motif popular in the era. The woodwork on the interior, other than the mantels, hints at the coming Ital-ianate style with its use of modified pedi-ments over all the openings. Another pair of double doors are available to separate the principal bedroom and the two which are located in line with it from the main part of the house. All of these originally opened to a shuttered porch which was presumably enclosed by Edward Vason Jones, to judge from its elegant triple-hung win-dows. This and the rebuilding of the steps to the three porches are the only visible signs of intervention by Jones, a testimony to his deft handling of the insertion of modern necessi-ties. The only major changes which have occurred to the house are in the kitchen wing. There are references to the original kitchen being a separate building which would be expect-ed for a house of this stature in 1850. There are also references to the hall behind the dining room having been a breezeway. The best guess is that the current kitchen was added at some point in the late 19th century and connected by a breezeway. This is consistent with the lower height of its ceilings and would have still allowed for windows on the rear wall of the dining room, maintaining the symmetry of the house. Regardless of when the conversion took place, the dining room still has two marvelous windows and the kitchen would make any caterer green with envy. The current owners have brought the entire house into pristine condition. The fur-nishings from the Hunters’ times have been augmented with comfort in mind. The baths and systems have been updated to the highest standards and the glass in the bedroom win-dows onto the porch has been replaced with mirror to ensure privacy for all who are lucky enough to stay there. The two guest rooms in the adjacent cottage have also been updated. They have undertaken the challenge of preparing the land to serve as a prime hunting prop-erty. The result is a remarkable house on an idyllic expanse of land. The combination is as rare as the care which succeeding owners have lavished on this South Georgia landmark.

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Tarva Plantation 1850 was researched, written, and designed by John David Myles, principal of Wild Holly Studio. An attorney, former circuit judge, and preservationist, he has written and lectured for the Filson Historical Society in his native Kentucky and is the author of a soon to be published comprehensive study of historic archi-tecture in Shelby County, Kentucky. Myles has also consulted on various restoration projects. He and his wife, Mary Helen, received awards from the Ida Lee Willis Foun-dation and Preservation Kentucky for their restoration of the 1839 John Dale house in Simpsonville, Kentucky, where they live with their Scottish terrier and stray cat.

This report was commissioned by Chip Hall and Lee Walters,Plantation Services, Charleston, South Carolina, and Albany, Georgia

Copyright 2016 Wild Holly Studios

W I L D H O L LY S T U D I O 1908 Webb Road, Simpsonville, Kentucky 40067 (502)722-0819 (502)381-0791 [email protected]