Having the kitchen separate from the main house was common in the South; it was done because the most common room to catch fire was the kitchen. I owned such a house that dated back before the Revolutionary War.
It was also common to have the kitchen not connected to the house in the South. So the whole house wouldn't get hot when you cook dinner breakfast or whatever it helped the main house to stay cool that's the real reason
You’d think that you could take people at face value way back then, but corruption is ALWAYS in the mix somewhere. It certainly is a huge and attractive house. The use of the cross ventilation was totally under-utilised in most houses,but not in this one. I wonder did that first owner ever get caught out about his wicked ways with slaves, false alliances and general money-grubbing. I hope so!
What a fabulous house and thank you to the people who restored it. We have lost so many glorious home in this last century +. Thank you for this video. Greetings from Seattle where we have lost so much of our old city.
Your most unusual walking directions of how we should look at the house is truly phenomenal... Thank you so much forgiving me bearing while viewing the photographs.... You really are a very thoughtful narrator and I don't think you ever saw a box in your life! (As in thinking outside of!)
Lovely restoration. Another great save. When looking back at history regardless of what happened, it’s all of our history - it’s where we came from and important to never forget. Societies that don’t learn from their past, and cover up what happens because it’s an inconvenient truth or now makes us uncomfortable because it doesn’t fit with contemporary values and ethics always run the risk of repeating the same mistakes. Great clip, and nice short history lesson.
@@raquelgarvin8391 I think that the comment can be taken as a personal criticism, rather than a statement about modern society and our cultural legacy, I come from New Zealand 🇳🇿 and down under we are very young and still coming to terms with the genocidal activity the British Empire conducted 200 years ago against the indigenous people. We are taught in school that if you don’t know and own your history then societies are ‘doomed’ to repeat past mistakes. I know this curriculum is taught all over Europe as well. Learn from the past.
@@RocBush I wonder if those who are currently enslaved in Africa would love to receive a check from those in America who have been free well over a hundred years. I can imagine it’s a terrible feeling knowing your ancestors left you behind and seemingly never cared about you. Maybe it would help them in freeing themselves from their own people. I don’t know just a thought.
This house had a ghost story in Katherine Windham Tucker's book "13 Alabama Ghosts and Jeffery." Ever kid growing up in Alabama in the 1970s read that book! I am so glad you did this video because I always wanted to explore the inside of this beautiful home.
Plantation homes are very haunted because of the evil enslavement of human beings, without a doubt. The best construction elements still display the skill of enslaved artisans. Rather than letting plantation homes rot into dust, they should be saved like Kenworthy Hall was. African American historians can be guides and provide historical interpretations for those which are opened to the public
I never read that book, as I'm not into the idea of ghosts, but my 36 year old sure is and I believe he's read that very same book! If not, he will want to, so thanx for sharing that tidbit about this house being in it!! 🌹
Such a magnificent home. Some of these homes not only had a kitchen sepetate from the main living space that not only prevented the entire home from burning in case a fire broke out in the kitchen as well as for keeping the home cooloer in the summer but they had a kitchen in the basement which helped keep the home warmer in winter. My favorite architecture in these old homes is the staircases though. It's amazing to me how they were designed to act as a breezeway to cool the entire home in the warmer seasons
That is such an interesting fact to learn about basement kitchens! What smart and practical ideas our ancestors had! Where I live, in the Gulf Coast South area, basements are nonexistent (Or rare at the very least!), but in the old days big houses were raised off the ground several feet, on brick pillars and such, for the air flow, and lots of these homes had lattice work all around. On a tour of such an old home near me once years ago, the guide told us that people would even sit under there in the shady coolness and have liquid refreshments or even dine there. The lattice work gave them plenty of privacy and fresh air, and kept them cooler than the house would in the summer. I thought that was pretty smart!
Gorgeous home. My mothers family descends from Marion and are still there on the family land. There are many intact former homes from that era. You could probably have a weeks worth of content from Marion and nearby Selma alone.
The Grant house info Galena Illinois has a separate kitchen and is said info the summer it kept the heat from cooking from heating the rest of the house.
I think the hall is absolutely beautiful. Ken, you are the best narrator and I love your presentations. You make the presentation about the house, not about you. Thank you.
They appear to have done a wonderful job on the restoration. This is not a criticism but now, they need to work on furnishing and accessorizing it to the right period. These rooms would look dramatically different. Probably the great majority of these big plantation homes are completely gone. It is nice to see this one saved and restored despite its dark ownership past.
I’m very used to the idea of a “great house” in the Virgin Islands. Whim Plantation in St, Croix is a great example. We see so much of this type of functional use in this latitude, such as the cistern and separate cooking area for fire prevention concerns. Nice narration. The original owner certainly walked a fine line between North and South. A true hypocrite he was but Northern soldiers left it alone to save it for the modern restoration. Thank you everybody. It is worthy as a true historical archive.
What a fantastic home. Love the main entrance. Love that porch. What a love to take 23 years to restore this magnificent home. I hope they adore it. I would. Thanks Ken. Hopefully your all healed up and working on your house again!
This house was definitely a change from the Federal and Greek Revival (the first one) plantation homes of those areas. I had to laugh when you said the kitchen was not used as such when the photo was taken; most people don't keep bags of ammonium nitrate in the middle of the floor, lol. We see sleazy business people today, and it's nothing new as history shows us. Interesting layout of the home. Glad this one has been restored, even if it's not open to the public. Too many historic buildings have met the wrecking ball.
I didn’t want to say anything about that in the video because TH-cam would probably flag the content, but I was waiting for someone to point that out! Good eye!
This house has been featured in at least three books. One is “thirteen Alabama Ghosts and Geoffrey” by Katherine Tucker Wyndham. I visted the home when it was in a deplorable state.
beauty is in the eye of the beholder....A horrible truth of history...slavery...so many people, human beings that God created were enslaved and mistreated in that house and on the land...May they be remembered forever and always
Any house of even moderate size had back staircases, family, children, servants would use them. Elaborate stairs were for entrances. And servants were housed in small rooms under stairs etc for easy/ quick access to family kitchens and summer kitchens were kept away from main area, due to possible fires, but cooking smells, condensation, noise from daily food preparation.
I had to go to the speed settings and slow it down some, due to him talking too fast for me to catch up! I use the closed captioning feature regularly, but the captions kept covering over the view of this lovely house, so I was really frustrated until I got it slowed down just enough to understand him! Worked it out and I was able to enjoy the video much better! 😊
This is a beautiful home . Love the color photos of that staircase and the floor to ceiling window at the landing . Also the in wall bookcases that are glassed in are really great . Would love those in my own home . It’s really heartbreaking when teenagers destroy such historic places with parties that include vadalism , graffiti , smashing windows and just total disregard for a lovely property . When a home like this one is left to disrepair and neglect it’s an open invitation to teenagers and vandalism . Really glad a family purchased the property and restored the home . Love these Historic homes . ❤😊👍🏻💯🇨🇦🇨🇦🇺🇸🇺🇸
Great tour. I'd never heard of this place. It was definitely a deviation from the simple usual federal styles that had the Greek Rivial porticos added in the 1850s and 60s.
He was my many times great uncle. Note: he was not a plantation owner, he was a cotton broker. He used his property to raise race horses (a hobby). The slaves he "owned" were inherited and he kept them on the property and never sold them. He lost a fortune in cotton when the Union Army burned the harbor and warehouses in Mobile, AL after the war. He built in the Italianate style because his brother in Law was building a traditional Antebellum style mansion. It is build on a large, thick charcoal base with helps absorb moisture as well as there being air gap between the outer and inner walls. The house has been for sale and is on the National Historic Registry. Thought you should know. And no, no one ever jumped from the tower windows and now haunts the place.
he is being unfairly demonized like all us true Southerners are. beautiful house and nice man. am descended from slave holders. my g'g'g grandfather required all slaves be able to read as he was a hard core Bible thumper and wanted them to be able to read it also. their descendants are my neighbors and they still talk about the stories handed down through their families about how once you were on his place you were never sold away from your family. we go to each others funerals, weddings, and church homecoming ( annual celebration of the founding of the church). ours is a shared history and we love each other.
As a descendant of former slaves and displaced Natives, your people experienced those tragic experiences because they refused to realize that you shouldn't take ownership of people. I feel limited sympathy for ANY hardships and I don't think I am alone 😮
To the descendent of the slaves, I agree with you. No one should own another human being. I would hope ppl would learn from the history but I doubt if they will. Just another story and other victims/since the beginning of humanity.
What a beautiful, balanced house. I am glad it was saved. But what a slimeball that original owner was, playing both ends against the middle! Not an ancestor anyone decent can be proud of, that's for sure.
My mom's friend owns the house. All the restoration work was done in like the 50s or 60s and needs to be redone. But its a great house. She bought it for the land to breed horses. And I'm not a fan of the current paint colors in it
It was a lovely house whose inhabitants perpetuated the horror and disgrace of one human being forcibly enslaving another. A house where people worked from dusk to dawn with no pay and no guarantee that they wouldn't be sold away from their children or loved ones. So while some are able to focus on the historical aspect of architecture and large rooms, I cannot overlook the day-to-day of the oppressed people who cleaned those rooms without freedom or hope to live their lives as their enslavers did.
Thanks, Having grew up in a large city, I lived in a lot of big houses, but none like that, 😂😅😂. I love the grandor that they have. But I'm left wondering three things? 1. Why did it set empty for so many years, was it ever for sale then? 2. Where they asking to much money for it then, considering the shape it was in? 3. What did it sale for?? Thanks
Having the kitchen separate from the main house was common in the South; it was done because the most common room to catch fire was the kitchen. I owned such a house that dated back before the Revolutionary War.
It was also common to see a garconniere for unmarried older boys & men. This kept them separated from the young unmarried ladies.
I adore old houses 💜
And cooler in the summer?
@@annetheurich507 .. a GARCONNIERE? Fertile territory for Google research.
It was also common to have the kitchen not connected to the house in the South.
So the whole house wouldn't get hot when you cook dinner breakfast or whatever it helped the main house to stay cool that's the real reason
How nice someone could restore the house. And love how your videos are short but give us so much information
TBH it currently needs a lot of restoration work. Those color photos are very old
You’d think that you could take people at face value way back then, but corruption is ALWAYS in the mix somewhere. It certainly is a huge and attractive house. The use of the cross ventilation was totally under-utilised in most houses,but not in this one. I wonder did that first owner ever get caught out about his wicked ways with slaves, false alliances and general money-grubbing. I hope so!
Anytime someone restores one of these unique homes, I sigh greatly, that history was not forgotten.
If we forget our past, we lose sight of our future. I forgot who said that, but I'm sure you're old enough to know.
What a fabulous house and thank you to the people who restored it. We have lost so many glorious home in this last century +. Thank you for this video. Greetings from Seattle where we have lost so much of our old city.
Love the winding stairs!
I loved them too but was distracted by the large freeze placed on the main floor next to them. The archways were amazing!
Your most unusual walking directions of how we should look at the house is truly phenomenal... Thank you so much forgiving me bearing while viewing the photographs.... You really are a very thoughtful narrator and I don't think you ever saw a box in your life! (As in thinking outside of!)
Lovely restoration. Another great save. When looking back at history regardless of what happened, it’s all of our history - it’s where we came from and important to never forget. Societies that don’t learn from their past, and cover up what happens because it’s an inconvenient truth or now makes us uncomfortable because it doesn’t fit with contemporary values and ethics always run the risk of repeating the same mistakes. Great clip, and nice short history lesson.
CUT THE CHECK🤬
@@RocBush 😂 ya reckon?? I hadn’t thought of it that way. Noted.
Okay please educate me on the mistake and how it could accur!?
@@raquelgarvin8391 I think that the comment can be taken as a personal criticism, rather than a statement about modern society and our cultural legacy, I come from New Zealand 🇳🇿 and down under we are very young and still coming to terms with the genocidal activity the British Empire conducted 200 years ago against the indigenous people. We are taught in school that if you don’t know and own your history then societies are ‘doomed’ to repeat past mistakes. I know this curriculum is taught all over Europe as well. Learn from the past.
@@RocBush I wonder if those who are currently enslaved in Africa would love to receive a check from those in America who have been free well over a hundred years. I can imagine it’s a terrible feeling knowing your ancestors left you behind and seemingly never cared about you. Maybe it would help them in freeing themselves from their own people. I don’t know just a thought.
It is beautiful. The woodwork is beautiful. Thanks for sharing
I'm always glad to see these old beauties gain a new life.
Happy to know someone loves this house again.
Beautiful woodwork throughout. thankfully someone purchased it to care for it.
Glad that someone had the fortitude to repair such a stately mansion.
I’ve been to the house a few years ago. It is massive! At that time it still needed some work.
Was it very bad?
@@janefromtennessee it wasn’t horrible I would say…just needed a good bit of TLC. Beautiful house though.
This house had a ghost story in Katherine Windham Tucker's book "13 Alabama Ghosts and Jeffery." Ever kid growing up in Alabama in the 1970s read that book! I am so glad you did this video because I always wanted to explore the inside of this beautiful home.
Perhaps the ghosts come from the poor slaves who were trapped in that awful servitude.
Plantation homes are very haunted because of the evil enslavement of human beings, without a doubt. The best construction elements still display the skill of enslaved artisans. Rather than letting plantation homes rot into dust, they should be saved like Kenworthy Hall was. African American historians can be guides and provide historical interpretations for those which are opened to the public
I never read that book, as I'm not into the idea of ghosts, but my 36 year old sure is and I believe he's read that very same book! If not, he will want to, so thanx for sharing that tidbit about this house being in it!! 🌹
Nice to get a happy ending for one of these old masterpieces. As always, good job.
I love the tower and the design of the house.
Such a magnificent home. Some of these homes not only had a kitchen sepetate from the main living space that not only prevented the entire home from burning in case a fire broke out in the kitchen as well as for keeping the home cooloer in the summer but they had a kitchen in the basement which helped keep the home warmer in winter. My favorite architecture in these old homes is the staircases though. It's amazing to me how they were designed to act as a breezeway to cool the entire home in the warmer seasons
That is such an interesting fact to learn about basement kitchens! What smart and practical ideas our ancestors had! Where I live, in the Gulf Coast South area, basements are nonexistent (Or rare at the very least!), but in the old days big houses were raised off the ground several feet, on brick pillars and such, for the air flow, and lots of these homes had lattice work all around. On a tour of such an old home near me once years ago, the guide told us that people would even sit under there in the shady coolness and have liquid refreshments or even dine there. The lattice work gave them plenty of privacy and fresh air, and kept them cooler than the house would in the summer. I thought that was pretty smart!
Beautiful and unique 😊❤
Gorgeous home. My mothers family descends from Marion and are still there on the family land. There are many intact former homes from that era. You could probably have a weeks worth of content from Marion and nearby Selma alone.
Beautiful restoration!
Thank you for saving that home!! That wood work over the archways is amazing!! I don’t know if I’ve ever seen anything quite like that before.
The Grant house info Galena Illinois has a separate kitchen and is said info the summer it kept the heat from cooking from heating the rest of the house.
Exactly! 🌹
Entry and staircase is magnificent.
I think the hall is absolutely beautiful. Ken, you are the best narrator and I love your presentations. You make the presentation about the house, not about you. Thank you.
They appear to have done a wonderful job on the restoration. This is not a criticism but now, they need to work on furnishing and accessorizing it to the right period. These rooms would look dramatically different. Probably the great majority of these big plantation homes are completely gone. It is nice to see this one saved and restored despite its dark ownership past.
Such a beautiful & interesting design.
So interesting! The estate is very beautiful! but what intrigues me is the story of the original people involved. TY
Love the oak woodwork and ceiling beams.❤
I’m very used to the idea of a “great house” in the Virgin Islands. Whim Plantation in St, Croix is a great example. We see so much of this type of functional use in this latitude, such as the cistern and separate cooking area for fire prevention concerns. Nice narration. The original owner certainly walked a fine line between North and South. A true hypocrite he was but Northern soldiers left it alone to save it for the modern restoration. Thank you everybody. It is worthy as a true historical archive.
Thank you so much for the history of the houses you highlight. Thankfullly, the family that eventually bought it restored it.
Im glad this national treasure was saved from destruction considering the skills that went into building it that nobody seems to have nowadays 😊😊😊
I agree it's gorgeous
What a beautiful home
Thank you Ken I really enjoy these videos.
The kitchen was separate so it wouldn't heat up the rest of the house. It's a beautiful house.
It's a crime how many families and beautiful homes were just sacrificed in that war.
I like the woodwork, especially the staircase.
You did a great job. This home is beautiful.
Whilst the history of the house is both intriguing and sad, it is wonderful that it eventually got restored to its almost former glory.
Cool as always !
What a fantastic home. Love the main entrance. Love that porch. What a love to take 23 years to restore this magnificent home. I hope they adore it. I would. Thanks Ken. Hopefully your all healed up and working on your house again!
This house was definitely a change from the Federal and Greek Revival (the first one) plantation homes of those areas. I had to laugh when you said the kitchen was not used as such when the photo was taken; most people don't keep bags of ammonium nitrate in the middle of the floor, lol. We see sleazy business people today, and it's nothing new as history shows us. Interesting layout of the home. Glad this one has been restored, even if it's not open to the public. Too many historic buildings have met the wrecking ball.
I didn’t want to say anything about that in the video because TH-cam would probably flag the content, but I was waiting for someone to point that out! Good eye!
Glad that someone was able to restore it.
Thank you again Ken 🙏☺️
This is a wonderful job of restoration.
Oh, how I would love a house like this. A real treasure.
This house has been featured in at least three books. One is “thirteen Alabama Ghosts and Geoffrey” by Katherine Tucker Wyndham. I visted the home when it was in a deplorable state.
Those pioneers truly created such beauty
Such a beautiful way to hide your slaves. I agree.
@@JaneAustenAteMyCat Today, they just call them "wage earners."
beauty is in the eye of the beholder....A horrible truth of history...slavery...so many people, human beings that God created were enslaved and mistreated in that house and on the land...May they be remembered forever and always
Any house of even moderate size had back staircases, family, children, servants would use them. Elaborate stairs were for entrances.
And servants were housed in small rooms under stairs etc for easy/ quick access to family
kitchens and summer kitchens were kept away from main area, due to possible fires, but cooking smells, condensation, noise from daily food preparation.
Edward Kenworth Carlilse: a businessman and he was a real bit of business himself.
Excellent use of the floor plans! It's the difference between GPS and hand written directions when "touring" a house! Thanks Ken
💛💛💛
It is beautiful in its Hay Day and very beautiful after renovation
Beautiful and freakin haunted.❤️
Beautiful he had an awsome talent🎉😮
I always love ur photos and information 👍🏼 if you could slow down when talking... it would make it more spooky 😉
I had to go to the speed settings and slow it down some, due to him talking too fast for me to catch up! I use the closed captioning feature regularly, but the captions kept covering over the view of this lovely house, so I was really frustrated until I got it slowed down just enough to understand him! Worked it out and I was able to enjoy the video much better! 😊
what a beautiful home love old houses they tell a story have character now a days everything is too cookie cutter
I always thought that was called a summer kitche that way when you were cooking the heat wouldn't create in the whole house🎉
That's what I was always taught the main reason was for detaching it.
The house is gorgeous.
Love this house
This is a beautiful home . Love the color photos of that staircase and the floor to ceiling window at the landing . Also the in wall bookcases that are glassed in are really great . Would love those in my own home . It’s really heartbreaking when teenagers destroy such historic places with parties that include vadalism , graffiti , smashing windows and just total disregard for a lovely property . When a home like this one is left to disrepair and neglect it’s an open invitation to teenagers and vandalism . Really glad a family purchased the property and restored the home . Love these Historic homes . ❤😊👍🏻💯🇨🇦🇨🇦🇺🇸🇺🇸
It’s gorgeous!!
Kills me to see these glorious old buildings rotting away.
Yeah, saved & restored...
Love those staircases!
Great tour. I'd never heard of this place. It was definitely a deviation from the simple usual federal styles that had the Greek Rivial porticos added in the 1850s and 60s.
The owner was...quite an opportunist. Beautiful house, though.
Beautiful ❤
Would love to see the porches to the kitchen and the kitchen restored.
Don't know if I've ever told you but I *love* your channel!!!❤❤❤❤❤
Summer kitchens were common even in the midwest. Kept the heat out of the main house, especially in canning season when temps were high.
I loved the video! Thank you, new sub!!¡
Amazing.
He was a man of his times...We didn't live in those times. Sometimes it's hard to understand our country then...
The home is beautiful but it is hard to enjoy when you know someone so awful lived there.😢
go snivel somewhere else
Seeing these plantations, reminds me of Joyner Castle in Omaha, Nebraska & the museum, today's architecture is not the same today
Nice video;thank you.
A very historical and forward looking design. It would require a lot to maintain and keep up. I see a great Air B and B home.
So,, I think it was Ken-wothy! good job!
Very cool!
He was my many times great uncle. Note: he was not a plantation owner, he was a cotton broker. He used his property to raise race horses (a hobby). The slaves he "owned" were inherited and he kept them on the property and never sold them. He lost a fortune in cotton when the Union Army burned the harbor and warehouses in Mobile, AL after the war. He built in the Italianate style because his brother in Law was building a traditional Antebellum style mansion. It is build on a large, thick charcoal base with helps absorb moisture as well as there being air gap between the outer and inner walls. The house has been for sale and is on the National Historic Registry. Thought you should know. And no, no one ever jumped from the tower windows and now haunts the place.
he is being unfairly demonized like all us true Southerners are. beautiful house and nice man. am descended from slave holders. my g'g'g grandfather required all slaves be able to read as he was a hard core Bible thumper and wanted them to be able to read it also. their descendants are my neighbors and they still talk about the stories handed down through their families about how once you were on his place you were never sold away from your family. we go to each others funerals, weddings, and church homecoming ( annual celebration of the founding of the church). ours is a shared history and we love each other.
As a descendant of former slaves and displaced Natives, your people experienced those tragic experiences because they refused to realize that you shouldn't take ownership of people. I feel limited sympathy for ANY hardships and I don't think I am alone 😮
To the descendent of the slaves, I agree with you. No one should own another human being. I would hope ppl would learn from the history but I doubt if they will. Just another story and other victims/since the beginning of humanity.
@@CarolKessler-p2z are you upset about the slavery going on in america right now as much as you are about something that happened 150 years ago?
He could have easily freed those people and paid them. He was rich enough.
Where may we find the floorplans for this house please?
He sounds like a real jerk but the house is beautiful and I'm glad someone saw fit to bring her back to her glory!
What a beautiful, balanced house. I am glad it was saved. But what a slimeball that original owner was, playing both ends against the middle! Not an ancestor anyone decent can be proud of, that's for sure.
WOW I would love to visit that house Beautiful...
My mom's friend owns the house. All the restoration work was done in like the 50s or 60s and needs to be redone. But its a great house. She bought it for the land to breed horses. And I'm not a fan of the current paint colors in it
Where is the dark secret?
Slaves
It was a lovely house whose inhabitants perpetuated the horror and disgrace of one human being forcibly enslaving another. A house where people worked from dusk to dawn with no pay and no guarantee that they wouldn't be sold away from their children or loved ones. So while some are able to focus on the historical aspect of architecture and large rooms, I cannot overlook the day-to-day of the oppressed people who cleaned those rooms without freedom or hope to live their lives as their enslavers did.
YES, thank you for saying this! So many in this comment section (that clearly did not pass the vibe check) are choosing to overlook this.
I would love to go see it.
Interesting! Thanks!
Kenworthy Hall is not too far from where I live. Sometimes you can see it from the road if the trees are cut.
This house reminds me of the Barnsley Gardens ruins in the Georgia mountains.
wow interesting history
I love the big chest freezers in the foyer next to the stairs. Is that for the dead bodies. ☠️👻💀
Hopefully more plantation homes will be saved. This is a magnificent place.
plantation houses are as hated by some as statues of Confederate soldiers.
@@savinghistory642 Only brainless revisionists hate them and want to rewrite history. Don't act like slavery wasn't just as common in the North.
Thanks👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
Beautiful home that thankfully was saved
Please do the daily mansion in Montana, he was americas cooper king! Very amazing property that’s being taken care of by a trust.
Love your videos ❤
Thanks, Having grew up in a large city, I lived in a lot of big houses, but none like that, 😂😅😂. I love the grandor that they have. But I'm left wondering three things? 1. Why did it set empty for so many years, was it ever for sale then? 2. Where they asking to much money for it then, considering the shape it was in? 3. What did it sale for?? Thanks
That's the one I want to live in! Love the stairs! Love the exterior! Wow
A devil with be a devil. Beautiful architecture.