The Garrett-Williamson Home at 395 Bishop Hollow Rd. in Newtown Square. The 240 acre home has always been about helping children, mothers etc.
Note: Today the Garrett-Williamson Home 240 acre home in Newtown Square. The farm, school and camp was originally started to support to support financially needy children and single moms. Today it still does so much for Newtown Square and vicinity. Today it connects people and nature by using their property as a canvas for learning.
A special thanks to Adam Levine of Media who helped me with addresses etc. of many of my Media postcards. Once again good friend Bob Strickler fixed my computer again.
CHESTER TIMES
June 16, 1922
NEWTOWN SQUARE IDEAL VACATION HOME IS OPENED
Garrett-Williamson Lodge to Received Its First Inmates
In
the heart of the green-clad hills of Delaware County, fanned by the cooling
breezes that sweep through numberless trees and surrounded by every comfort
that money can devise, many women and little children will this summer escape
the sweltering heat of the city in the home that has been provided for them
near Newtown Square, through the generosity of a Philadelphia woman.
Although
the donor of the money that made possible the erection of the building is no
longer living, the kindly spirit that prompted the gift of 260 acres of land
and $1,000,000 for the maintenance of the home seemed to hover above the huge
grey stone building yesterday, when more than 500 persons viewed the premises
for the first time at the formal opening of what is to be known as the
Garrett-Williamson Lodge.
Named
for the woman in whose mind the generous-hearted scheme originated, Mrs.
Elizabeth Williamson Garrett, the home will today receive its first inmates,
when Miss Alice W. Penrose, director, and her staff of assistants welcome a
group of women come to spend their vacation in the thoroughly up-to-date and
modernly equipped dwelling provided for them.
Although, according to Mrs. Garrett’s stipulation, the home is for
single women and children, only adults will be accommodated during the first
weeks until the household machinery is in perfect running order. Then children, too, will be admitted, until
every sunny, daintily-furnished bedroom in the entire three-story building is
occupied.
The
keynote of the spirit of home life which is the outstanding feature of the
lodge was struck yesterday by John L. Clawson, president of the Board of
Managers, when he asserted emphatically that the home is not an “institution,”
according to the usual meaning of the word.
“The
occupants of the home will be like members of one big cub,” Mr. Clawson
said. “There will be no “charity”
connected with the establishment – the women and children who come here will
all be guests and take part in a club life that will make them forget their
life in the city and remember only that they are here to enjoy themselves to
the full extent of their ability.
And
surely no woman could fail to enjoy herself in the setting that has been
provided by Mrs. Garrett’s bounty. With
a huge living room and dining room on the ground floor, each having a large
stone fireplace and numerous windows curtained with bright-colored cretonnes,
the house presents to the visitor a picture of home-like attraction. From a broad, white-pillared porch at the
rear, a view of grassy fields and wooded hills greets the city-wearied eye,
while on the hottest day of summer there is always a breeze to flutter the
awnings and come sweeping in at the windows that dot all sides of the long,
white-trimmed building.
CALIFORNIA
STYLE – In a cement-floored kitchen in the basement, equipped with all the
latest culinary devices, is prepared the food that is sent up on a dumb waiters
to the pantry and thence to the dining room.
Here it is taken by the guests, in cafeteria fashion to the small
tables, scattered throughout the length of the dining room or on the spacious
porch, to be eaten within sight of the beckoning outdoors.
On
the second and third floors are the light-walled bedrooms, single for the most
part, but some equipped with half a dozen or more beds for the accommodation of
groups of women who come to the home together.
Each is provided with a bureau and bright-painted chair, matching in
tone, the curtains at the window, and each has a curtained space against the
wall to take the place of the less sanitary clothes closet.
Although
the building as it is at present can accommodate 100 persons at a time, it is
planned to erect separate bungalows in the future to add to the sleeping
capacity of the home. There will also be
a swimming pool, tennis courts, a space for baseball, a gymnasium, radio
equipment and numerous other amusements provided for the fortunate persons who
will spend their vacation weeks in this ideal spot.
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