Hartford's Lost Castle

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  • Опубликовано: 5 окт 2024
  • This video is about the James Goodwin House, also known as Woodlands and as the Goodwin Castle. Built in 1871, it stood near the intersection of Asylum Avenue and Woodland Street in Hartford, Connecticut. Once the largest private home in the state, it was torn down in 1940.
    #Hartford #HartfordCT #MarkTwain
    The Chuboda Photographs of the Goodwin Castle are at the Connecticut Historical Society:
    emuseum.chs.org...
    In the video I also show a c. 1900 photograph of the house, also from the Connecticut Historical Society:
    hdl.handle.net/...
    There’s also a photograph of the Goodwin Tombstone at Cedar Hill Cemetery from the Connecticut Historical Society: emuseum.chs.org...
    The photograph of the Twitchell House (accession number 2022.1.8) is also from the Connecticut Historical Society and is duplicated in Steve Courtney’s books Joseph Hopkins Twichell: The Life and Times of Mark Twain's Closest Friend and Mark Twain’s Hartford.
    In the video I show a streoview of the house from the collections of the New York Public Library:
    digitalcollect...
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Комментарии • 27

  • @michaelmarshall7575
    @michaelmarshall7575 2 года назад +6

    It is a CRIME that it was TORN down !! Thanks for the upload !!

  • @darrinvonstein6101
    @darrinvonstein6101 2 года назад +2

    Rev. Francis Goodwin worked with the British-born, American architect Frederick Clarke Withers for the overall design and planning of the house. In late December 1873 and early January 1874, Francis and his wife Mary were in London and commissioned the architect/designer E. W. Godwin to design an octagonal table as well as a fireplace mantle. Godwin's "Bamboo" patterned wallpaper was also installed in the dining room. It is unknown if the Goodwin's commissioned any other British architects and/or designers during that trip to London. The Goodwin's were very influential with other British architects getting commissions in Hartford.

  • @mht5875
    @mht5875 Год назад +2

    This was very close to where my father's mother lived over on Elizabeth St, very sad this beautiful house was taken down before I was born.

  • @kristinehanko6376
    @kristinehanko6376 2 года назад +4

    Thanks for sharing the story of the "castle". I am saddened that it was torn down. I did not know that there were so many grand houses on Woodland Street "back in the day". I wish my parents were still here to ask them if they remember it. I love history of Hartford. Thanks again.

    • @gailnorck7273
      @gailnorck7273 2 года назад

      Yes! Wishing my parents and grandparents could see these wonderful, historical images of Hartford! They were all such a huge part of it. So enjoyable!

  • @jackd8602
    @jackd8602 Год назад +2

    Best of the Best!! Thanks Dan.

  • @raymonddubois9242
    @raymonddubois9242 Год назад +2

    I am so happy to have found this site. What a marvelous treasure has been created. Many thanks...from a new subscriber.

  • @wendyparis7921
    @wendyparis7921 2 года назад +2

    James L. Goodwin was my great uncle 🥰 Of course, never there but I was at the house on Woodside Circle plenty of times. Also quite grand but the yard was my favorite.

  • @alexarobinson2850
    @alexarobinson2850 7 месяцев назад +1

    More parks for Hartford! 🎉

  • @joane.landers9151
    @joane.landers9151 5 месяцев назад +1

    I would suspect that the Goodwin's mentioned in your video, could & perhaps did, trace their ancestry back to William Goodwin, who was one of the first settlers to arrive from the Boston, MA area by sailing up the Connecticut River with others and arriving on the western bank of what would become Hartford in about 1635 (?). William Goodwin was one of my ancestors. It's over 60 years ago when I was doing research at the CT State Library & CT Historical Society for my mother; one of her maternal lines goes back to William Goodwin.

  • @terriwilson890
    @terriwilson890 2 года назад +3

    I love your videos. Keep them coming!

  • @junkandthangs
    @junkandthangs 2 года назад +2

    another classic video, good to see you stepped away from the Downtown area. Thanks

  • @victorlopez2143
    @victorlopez2143 2 года назад +2

    Love to hear the history of Hartford and it's houses.. Unreal how Hartford was back then compare to now. It's so different. Thank you for the history lessons. I have viewed other videos about Hartford and it's buildings. I grew up in COT and I wonder how that area was before it was called Charter Oak Terrance.. Just wondering .... :)

    • @historywithdansterner263
      @historywithdansterner263  2 года назад +2

      I just checked the historic atlases of Hartford and it seems it was undeveloped land before COT. It may have been farmland before that. In the 1920 Sanborn Atlas it's been laid out with streets and building lots, but there are no houses yet. In the 1942 map, Charter Oak Terrace is there with a completely different street layout having replaced the earlier plan.

    • @victorlopez2143
      @victorlopez2143 2 года назад +1

      @@historywithdansterner263 Thanks

  • @sedumplant
    @sedumplant 2 года назад +1

    Was the artist of the early 1930's James Goodwin McManus related to James Goodwin ?

  • @markrichards6863
    @markrichards6863 2 месяца назад +1

    Redevelopment in the guise of urban renewal, ruined Hartford. Not enough of the past was preserved. They succeeded in making Hartford look like every other small city, with an uninteresting downtown, which is deserted after six o'clock.

    • @historywithdansterner263
      @historywithdansterner263  2 месяца назад

      Certain landmarks have been preserved, like the Old State House and the Mark Twain House. Its too bad that the Goodwin Mansion was not one of those.

  • @ezinafauda4394
    @ezinafauda4394 5 месяцев назад +1

    Disgusting this was lost

  • @johnfoster535
    @johnfoster535 5 месяцев назад +1

    Yes...what a shame to lose such a beautiful creation ! Seems to be the story of Hartford, losing its history and decaying into a third world mess. Hartford possessed such wealth and grandeur...perhaps the wealthiest city in the U.S. at one time. How beautiful and stately was Woodland St, lined with all the trees....now, just a bus ridden road to the ghetto down the street. So much history in Hartford....Union Army General Griffin Steadman from Trinity college and his statue by St. Augustine church....by " Campfield Avenue" where the Union army had its training grounds...not to mention Steadman's grave in the stately and historic Cedar Hill cemetery across from Goodwin Park. I am drawn to this channel because both sides of my family lived in these areas of Hartford, well over 100 years ago, and as a boy,I would visit the home of my father's family which today has a National Register of Historic Places plaque on it.

  • @unzipthat
    @unzipthat Год назад +1

    How does Walter Lippincott Goodwin fit into all this? I currently have an extensive file of pictures of Walter Lippincott Goodwin's Mansion from before and after the devastating fire. Also, wasn't Woodside Circle developed by James Goodwin? and wasn't this James Goodwin brother of Walter? And the land where Walter's Mansion is located given to him by his father?

    • @historywithdansterner263
      @historywithdansterner263  Год назад

      Walter Lippincott Goodwin was the son of James Junius Goodwin and the nephew of Rev Francis Goodwin. He had a brother James Lippincott Goodwin: www.findagrave.com/memorial/14729843/james-lippincott-goodwin

    • @unzipthat
      @unzipthat Год назад

      @@historywithdansterner263 why do we not see anything on Walter's Mansion?

    • @historywithdansterner263
      @historywithdansterner263  Год назад

      @@unzipthat I'll have to think about that for a future video!