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Photo: Courtesy SSHS
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Photo: Jerry A. McCoy
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In the last installment
of Silver Spring: Then & Again, I explored the
history of founder Francis Preston Blair's country estate
"Silver Spring" as well as the Blair Station Post
Office, later built upon the site. This month I turn my attention
to the estate neighboring Blair to the northwest, owned by
his son Montgomery and named "Falklands."
Of the three Blair summer estates constructed in what would
become downtown Silver Spring (the third being The Moorings,
belonging to Blair's other son, James) Falkland is the
one most shrouded in mystery
from who really torched
it at the end of the Civil War to the unknown reasons for
there being so little documentation on the house itself.
Montgomery Blair was the eldest of Francis Preston Blair's
four children. Born in Franklin County, Ky., Montgomery graduated
from West Point in 1835. Having studied law in St. Louis,
Mo., he became a U.S. attorney for that state and in 1842
at the age of 29, became the mayor of St. Louis.
Blair moved to Washington, D.C. in 1852, establishing his
residence at Blair House, located on Pennsylvania Avenue diagonally
across from the White House. In 1857 Blair served as counsel
in the case of slave Dred Scott. Scott wanted to sue in federal
court for his freedom and that of his wife after their master
had moved them to Missouri, then free territory. (The case,
argued before the Supreme Court, failed.)
Blair later served as President Abraham Lincoln's U.S.
Postmaster General from 1861 to 1864 and is credited with
founding the Universal Postal Union. The UPN created an agreement
between nations, which standardized postal rates and services.
During his term Blair also originated prepaid postage, free
mail delivery in cities, money orders, and railway postal
cars.
Two years after moving to Washington, Blair began construction
of his summer estate in 1854 on land adjoining that of his
father's. Located just over a quarter of a mile to the
northwest, Blair named his mansion Falkland. (Does
any reader know why this name was chosen?) Built on a tree-covered
hill, the front entrance faced north towards the present-day
intersection of Colesville Road and East-West Highway.
About a dozen years after the house was built, tragedy struck
when, in July 1864, shortly after Confederate troops retreated
north from the Battle of Ft. Stevens in Washington, the house
was burned to the ground.
Here is how Montgomery's son, Gist Blair explained the
fire:
"[Confederate] General[Jubal] Early burned my father's
house, known as Falkland,' which adjoined that
of Silver Spring. It was a total loss, because although insured
it was not insured against the public enemy. General Early
afterwards denied having authorized this vandalism, when it
was criticized by good people everywhere."
Blair then goes on to quote from an interview with General
Early:
"[W]hen in front of Washington some of my troops were
very determined to destroy the house of Mr. Francis P. Blair
and had actually removed some furniture probably supposing
it to belong to his son, a member of the Federal Cabinet.
As soon as I came up I immediately stopped the proceeding
and compelled the men to return every article so far as I
knew, and placed a guard to protect it. The house of his son,
Montgomery Blair, a member of the Cabinet, was subjected to
a different rule for obvious reasons."
However, according to Blair Lee, a nephew of Montgomery Blair,
retreating Confederate troops were not to blame. Lee related
that Major General John C. Breckenridge, a distant relative
of the Blairs and participant in the Battle of Ft. Stevens,
had sought shelter at Blair's Silver Spring mansion.
Breckenridge set guards around Blair's home to protect
it from the host of camp followers, civilian vandals, looters,
and pillagers who had followed in the wake of the troops.
Early did not take this precaution at Falkland and it was
these camp followersnot Confederate troopswho
set fire to Falkland.
Whoever was responsible in setting the fire, the resulting
ruins were dramatic, as the Silver Spring: Then image
testifies.
An engraving titled "Ruins of the Blair Mansion, Near
WashingtonFrom a Sketch by our Special Artist,"
appeared in the August 6, 1864 Frank Leslie's Illustrated
Newspaper. This publicity undoubtedly spurred tourists,
seen in the foreground of the photograph, to journey out from
Washington to view the ruins.
No mystery surrounds who torched Falkland a second time nearly
a century later
the Silver Spring Volunteer Fire Department!
On September 7, 1958, firefighters from the two companies
performed a "controlled burn" to test their equipment
and routines. The land, owned by the Blair Management Corp.,
was to be developed for construction of apartments and a "modern"
supermarket. Hundreds of area residents came out to watch
the mansion go up in flames from the comfort of their lawn
chairs. (Does anyone have photographs of this fire?)
Said Mrs. Adolphus Staton, a granddaughter of Montgomery
Blair's who spent time at the house as a child: "I
guess burning the mansion down to make way for progress was
about as dignified a way to go as any."
The Silver Spring: Again image shows the "progress"
for which the mansion's destruction cleared the way.
If you can share with the Silver Spring Historical
Society photographs or memorabilia of downtown Silver Spring
from any years for use in a future book, please contact SSHS
at PO Box 1160, Silver Spring, MD 20910-1160 or email sshistory@yahoo.com.
The society's web site is www.sshistory.org.
Future residents of Silver Spring will thank you!
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