[Source:
W. H. Woodson, History of Clay County,
Missouri
(Topeka, KS: Historical Publishing Company, 1920), page 480-482.] George
T. Hall, of the George T.
Hall Livestock Commission Company, of Kansas City, Missouri, whose
residence is
"White Hall" on the "Clover Hill Farm," is the owner of one
of the most attractive places in Clay County. Mr. Hall has been engaged
in
business in Kansas City for a number of years and for the last few
years has
made his home in this county. He was born in Henry County, Kentucky,
December
22, 1850, and is a son of Thomas and Edna (Fallis) Hall, both natives
of
Kentucky. The
Hall family came to Missouri
in 1857 and settled in Buchanan County, and the father was engaged in
farming
and stock raising there for twenty years, when he removed to Gower,
Clinton
County, Missouri, and he and his wife spent the remainder of their
lives there.
They were the parents of the following children: John, deceased; D. S.,
deceased; George T., the subject of this sketch; Erasmus C., a
prominent
attorney of Kansas City, Missouri. George
T. Hall was reared and
educated in Buchanan County and in early life engaged in the mercantile
business at Gower, Missouri. May
30, 1881, George T. Hall was
united in marriage with Miss Inez C. Shields, a daughter of Zadok and
Penelope
(Asbury) Shields, both Mr.
Hall is the owner of 800
acres
in Liberty township, which is known as "Clover Hill Farm"; and his
home, "White Hall," is best described by the architect, Mr. Edgar P.
Madorie, who designed it, as follows: "On a tract of seventy acres on
the
Excelsior Springs electric line, one-half mile south of Liberty,
Missouri,
George T. Hall, of the George T. Hall Livestock Commission Company, of
Kansas
City, Missouri, erected a large country home of colonial architecture. "The
house has many features
of the old New England style, such as was built in the colonial days.
The
structure consists of two floors with basement and attic and has a
frontage of
110 feet by 31 feet in depth. It is built entirely of lumber, the
exterior
walls faced with wide boards and painted white; and is roofed with wood
shingles of natural weathered color. The first-story floor is but one
step
above the The
front and rear entrance with
their two-story covered porticoes, long spindle columns, and Dutch
doors with
side lights and iron balconies suspended from above, form a very
interesting
picture of those old colonial days. It
has been said that this type
of
architecture has been almost forgotten, as it is not in keeping with
modern
times; but the owner was desirous of carrying out in detail this
beautiful
period. Upon
this tract of land
surrounding this beautiful home, the architect has prepared landscape
drawings,
which, when completed, will surpass any home in this part of the
country. The
entire seventy acres will be
beautified with drives and stone bridges, old-fashioned well with oaken
buckets, an ice house with a unique tower, dinner bell suspended on a
stone
column 16 feet high, exedra on a mound by a lake, shelter houses at the
main
entrances, and formal gardens 70 by 200 feet landscaped with flower
beds, drinking
fountains, sun dials, bird baths and surrounded with covered promenades
and
rustic stone walls and steps. The
interior of the house is
finished with white and tinted gray and ivory; natural finished floors
and
old-fashioned colonial wall decorations, fireplaces and lighting
fixtures.
Features which are interesting and refer to centuries ago are the
bookcases and
china closets. These cabinets are nothing more than recesses in the
wall and
enclosed with old-fashioned glass paneled doors. The rooms are large, light and especially well ventilated; and the service portion, such as baths, kitchens and pantries, have tile lined walls and floor and are equipped with all modern conveniences such as cabinets, hinged tables, electrical ranges, sinks, refrigerators, etc. Upon the
completion of
this
edifice, the architectural character was departed from by adding a
humorous
feature, that of placing bronze door knockers upon three of the chamber
doors—a
symbol of "Robinson Crusoe," the old "Liberty Bell" and the
"Devil with a Fire Pot." Biography Index Susan Hawkins © 2024 If you find any links inoperable, please send me a message. |