Roseate Spoonbills on Big Slough

Roseate Spoonbills on Big Slough
Roseate Spoonbills on Big Slough
Showing posts with label Rosedown Plantation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rosedown Plantation. Show all posts

Sunday, April 23, 2017

Tour of Rosedown Plantation House


Rosedown Plantation is very beautiful.  It was bought from the family and fully restored before being sold to the state. You can only see it by going on a tour. I enjoyed both the house and the talk given by the tour guide.

The house has front porches on both levels. You enter into a stunning front hall. To the left of the hall is a master bedroom; to the right the parlor. Behind it is the dining room and then walking left you get to the kitchen, pantry and Martha Turnbull's workroom. The wing on the far right houses the master's study. Bedrooms and work rooms are upstairs.



The house sits down a long allee  of Oak Trees - with the front yard fenced from the main garden that I featured in a previous post. 

A line of rockers invites lingering


View down the allee from the front porch




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The stunning mahogany staircase and the block wallpaper by Dufour et Cie

A detail of the wallpaper


The dining table set for a banquet with the "fan" over it. 
The stairs for the slaves - these worn stairs evoked the many feet that had climbed up and down over the years


The desk from where Martha Turnbull ran the plantation - The room is just off the kitchen and has an outside door so the slave managers can come in to get their orders. 


Ceiling medallion


Lace curtain detail

The master bedroom just off the front hall


Same bed from another angle

Window treatment


Medallion and chandlier


The nursery

The rest of the nursery

A sewing area


The upstairs rooms had this flooring - a kind of painted canvas, a precursor to linoleum


Chess table of inlaid wood


Detail of rug in the study

First used as a doctor's house, then schoolhouse



The greenhouse and surrounding garden


Inside the greenhouse


Chicken coop


Currently I'm traveling and will soon have a blog about the Arizona-Sonoran Desert Museum, one of my favorite places. And three friends will all be taking me sightseeing so I'll be able to share lots of adventures. I'm finishing this on the Friday before it comes out from a motel in Tucson, AZ.  It was too hot to sleep out in my hammock last night and was 93 today, so I chickened out of camping and got in a shower. I also drove over 650 miles so I'm ready for bed.


Sunday, April 16, 2017

A Visit to Rosedown Gardens


Feburary 25, 2017

While I was living in Louisiana, a friend wanted to go to to St. Francisville to visit some of the plantations open to the public.  I spent an enjoyable few hours in the huge gardens and then returned later to tour the house. 

Rosedown is distinguished for its eighteen acre pleasure garden which was started by Martha Turnbull in 1836.  She has one of the oldest Camilla collections. as well as crepe myrtles and azaleas. She maintained a diary from 1836 until 1865 which has been transcribed and printed. It describes plantation life and gardening and is available at Amazon. 





Camellias had almost finished blooming and the azaleas were getting close to finishing, The trees had mostly started leafing out with bright, new leaves. I enjoyed walking the wooded trails, looking at the house and out buildings, and enjoying lovely points of interest along the trails through the shrubbery and trees. 



Lavender azeleas

Red azaleas

Pink azaleas


Bright new leaves gleamed against the sky



Lady Banksia Rose


View down a trail

The trees were beautiful overhead


Statues were scattered along the trails

Azalea portrait

I loved the play of light and shadow on the trails

Glowing Spanish moss


Bridal Wreath Spirea

There is a 660 foot allee to the house, that ends with a front yard full of short shrubbery


There were flower gardens to the side of the house - most were not in bloom but one was full of columbine

A woman warrior 

A redbud tree 

The center of the garden had this long axis with several fountains


I found a couple of lingering camellia blooms

A gazebo?

I loved the old wagon against the azaleas

A farm wagon with a cotton bale in it -cotton was one of the cash crops raised here


The house was even more fabulous.  It was completely restored not long before the state bought it. To be continued.