Edwardsville Intelligencer Thursday, May 10,
2001
Events set at Stephenson House - Restoration to begin on House erected in 1820
By Donna London Of the Intelligencer
The community is invited to attend unveiling and
ground-breaking ceremonies for the restoration of the 1820 Colonel
Benjamin Stephenson House next week. Starting off National Historic
Preservation Week, the ceremonies will be held Monday, May 14, at 4:30
p.m. at 409 South Buchanan Street on the grounds of what is believed to be
the oldest brick house in Madison County. Originally built from native
materials by local craftsmen several miles southeast of Edwardsville, the
Federal style two-story brick home is one of the few remaining homes in
Illinois built in the first quarter of the 19th century, according to the
Illinois State Historic Preservation Agency. Each of the four rooms has
original millwork and two of the original mantels designed in the Adams
style.
The ground breaking will officially signal the beginning of
the restoration of this 180-year-oldlandmark, the most extensive and
important historic restoration project in the city's 183-year history,
said Joe Weber, member of Edwardsville's Historic Preservation Commission
and co-chair of the Friends of Colonel Benjamin Stephenson House board.
Listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1980, the house
is an historical treasure from the earliest period of Edwardsville and the
Illinois territory, said Carol Wetzel, chair of the Friends of Colonel
Benjamin Stephenson House board. Built two-years after Illinois was
admitted to the unions by one of the framers of the state constitution,
the house was the location where many early political leaders met,
discussed business and were entertained by Stephenson and his wife, Lucy.
A home where Ninian Edwards, territorial governor, and his family lived
after their home, located at the present site of St. Boniface Catholic
Church, was destroyed by fire. Born in Pennsylvania in 1769, Stephenson
originally migrated westward into the Illinois territory in 1809 when he
was appointed to serve as the first sheriff of Randolph County. A
representative in the U.S. Congress from the Illinois Territory
from1814-1816, on April 29, 1816, President James Madison appointed
Stephenson to be the first receiver of public monies at Edwardsville in
Madison County, at a time when the northern border of Madison County
reached Canada. A state representative to the convention in Kaskaskia to
frame the first Illinois constitution in 1818, a year later Stephenson
assisted Edwards and Auguste Choteau in negotiating a treaty for the
United States to purchase land from the Kickapoo Indians in what became
central Illinois. Also, in 1819, Stephenson and Edwards petitioned for
land to be annexed into Edwardsville, laid out the area in street and
blocks and built their homes in what would become
upper-Edwardsville. An architect's rendering of the proposed
restoration of the house will be unveiled Monday when completed the home
will be open to the public as a house museum depicting the life and times
in early Edwardsville from 1816-1837; complete with trained docents
interpreting the early 1800's. The museum will be administered by the
not-for-profit board, the Friends of the Col. Benjamin Stephenson House,
Weber said. While the goal of HPC and Friends is to restore the home,
furnish it in accordance with the Stephenson household inventory of 1822
and open it to the public as a living hands-on museum, as work begins on
phase I, they have also begun to actively seek funds to complete the
restoration. Costs associated with the project are high given the nature
and quality of workmanship required, said Wetzel. This restoration project
offers individuals, organizations and corporations with an excellent
opportunity to help preserve a piece of our region's early heritage. Both
present and future generations will gain an increased understanding of our
community's historic significance because of the preservation efforts
undertaken with this project. The first attempt to obtain the property for
its historical value was in 1972. A bill sponsored by the late State Sen.
Sam Vadalabene was designed to restore the Stephenson house and name it a
state historic site to be opened to the public. The bill was passed by the
state legislature but vetoed by the governor, Weber said. Following a
request by the city's Historic Preservation Commission in 1998 state Sen.
Evelyn Bowles, D-Edwardsville, obtained a $500,000 grant to purchase and
restore the house. Known as "the frathouse next door to the Clark
station" for several decades, the house was purchased from the Sigma Phi
Epsilon Fraternity in 1999 for $150,000. Since that time, a Historic
Structures Report has been completed by restoration architects Jack Luer
Associates of St. Louis in conjunction with the Illinois Historic
Preservation Agency. According to that report enough remained of the
original structure to warrant restoring the building to its original 1820
appearance. Also discovered during research, are the extremely valuable
probate records revealing the home's inventory at the death of Stephenson
in 1822. Not only do the records reveal how the home was furnished, such
as the number of Windsor chairs, the records show that Stephenson paid a
local craftsman to turn 10-feet of beading, for one of the Adams-style
mantels at a cost of $1.75. The restoration project has been divided
into four phases. Each phase will be completed based on funds available
and raised. So far bids have been let for phase I totaling $328,000 and
will include installation of period windows, a shingled roof and interior
and exterior masonry restoration. Phase II includes reconstruction of the
interior, the back porch, courtyard and grounds and a summer kitchen at an
estimated cost of $505,981. Phase III will replace the household
furnishing based on the 1822 inventory at an estimated cost of
$207,650. The public is also invited to attend an unveiling of a
memorial marker honoring Stephenson on Sunday, May 20, at 1:00 at Lusk
Memorial Cemetery Park on Randle Street, the site of his final resting
place, said Weber. There will be an appearance by the Illinois Rangers
portraying the Ranger Unit to which Col. Stephenson was attached during
the War of 1812. The program will also feature a performance by the
Edwardsville Municipal Band.
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