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Cedar Grove Mansion

Cedar Grove Mansion
A566, Cedar Grove Mansion, Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States, 2017.jpg
Location 1 Cedar Grove Drive, Philadelphia 19131
Coordinates 39°58′45″N 75°12′16″W / 39.9792°N 75.2044°W / 39.9792; -75.2044Coordinates: 39°58′45″N 75°12′16″W / 39.9792°N 75.2044°W / 39.9792; -75.2044
Built 1748–50
Architectural style(s) Federal
Governing body Philadelphia Parks & Recreation,
Museum of Art
Owner Elizabeth Coates Paschall (original), City of Philadelphia (current)
Official name: Cedar Grove
Designated June 26, 1956
Designated February 7, 1972
Reference no. 72001151
Cedar Grove Mansion is located in Philadelphia
Cedar Grove Mansion
Location of Cedar Grove Mansion in Philadelphia
Cedar Grove Mansion is located in Pennsylvania
Cedar Grove Mansion
Location of Cedar Grove Mansion in Philadelphia
Cedar Grove Mansion is located in the US
Cedar Grove Mansion
Location of Cedar Grove Mansion in Philadelphia

Cedar Grove Mansion was the summer residence for five generations of Philadelphia families. The house was built as a rural retreat from city life, and was originally located within the present day Frankford neighborhood of Northeast Philadelphia, about 4 mi (6.4 km) beyond the colonial-era city limits. In 1746, Elizabeth Coates Paschall purchased the property on which the house was subsequently built. Paschall was a widow with three children who had inherited her husband's dry goods business and desired a rural retreat from the city near her father's farm in Frankford. Construction of the grey stone house on a plot of 15 acres (6.1 ha) along Frankford Road began in 1748 and continued to 1750.

Additions were made by Paschall and succeeding generations. A granddaughter named Sarah inherited the house, married Isaac Wistar Morris in 1795, and doubled the size of Cedar Grove with more rooms and a third floor. A wraparound porch was added later. Various architectural styles such as Baroque, Rococo, and Federal are evident in the interior rooms.

Lydia Thompson Morris, the last of the family to own Cedar Grove, gave the house and original furniture to the city of Philadelphia in 1926. The house was then moved from the Frankford neighborhood to Fairmount Park in 1926–28. The Philadelphia Museum of Art administers the house and has kept it fully furnished with period furniture passed down by generations of the Morris family. Guided tours of the house are available through the Art Museum.

Cedar Grove is registered on both the Philadelphia Register of Historic Places and the National Register of Historic Places.

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