The design of Glessner house by H. H. Richardson was strongly influenced by a photograph the Glessners had in their possession at the time they first met Richardson England Richardson Richardson Richardson 
The influence of Abingdon Abbey is most striking along the 18th Street side of the house, where one can compare the gable over the coach house, the entrance to the left with recessed balcony above, and the pitch of the roof.  The fact that the house was influenced by a barn design is significant in and of itself.  As Prairie Avenue developed into the premier residential street in Chicago Europe  for inspiration.  But those residents looked at the chateaus and manor houses as models for their own homes, not the barns!  It is yet another way in which the Glessner home is distinctly different from its neighbors, and speaks to the Glessners as individuals as well.
Abingdon Abbey was a Benedictine monastery also know as St. Mary’s Abbey located in Abingdon, historically in the county  of Berkshire Oxfordshire , England St. John’s Church  of Saint Nicholas 
Why the Glessners had this photo of the tithe barn is not known.  They had not traveled to England 
After Richardson 

Another great history lesson regarding the Glessner House. It's amazing how Richardson incorporated the look of the barn into the 18th Street portion of the house and coach house, but yet still made it distinctive in its own right.
ReplyDeleteIt's not clear to me whether this barn is standing today. You list lots of other buildings gone or extant, but you don't say about the barn, do you?
ReplyDeleteWe have been unable to determine with any certainty whether the tithe barn is still standing or not, which is why the building was not listed among the surviving nor lost buildings at Abingdon Abbey.
ReplyDeleteYour photograph of the Abingdon Abbey Tithe barn is not in fact of the still existing Tithe barn (now an Anglican Church) on Northcourt Road, Abingdon. It is of some ancillary abbey buildings, probably post-dissolutiion; the barn-like structure is in fact the carriage entrance to the stable block for Cosener's House (the building with the tall chimneys on the far left of the photo), the residence of the abbey kitchener or 'cuisenier'. The cottage to the left of the entrance was the gardener's cottage, probably rebuilt on the site of a derelict abbey fulling mill after the Dissolution of the abbey. Not quite as romantic as a tithe barn, but still an historic site.
ReplyDeleteThere is a YouTube video of the present day stables (now converted into accommodation.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wceNjba6kSs