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Fonthill, Mercer Museum, and Moravian Pottery and Tile Works

Fonthill, Mercer Museum and Moravian Pottery and Tile Works
MercerMuseum.jpg
Mercer Museum, October 2006
Fonthill, Mercer Museum and Moravian Pottery and Tile Works is located in Pennsylvania
Fonthill, Mercer Museum and Moravian Pottery and Tile Works
Fonthill, Mercer Museum and Moravian Pottery and Tile Works is located in the US
Fonthill, Mercer Museum and Moravian Pottery and Tile Works
Location Court St. and Swamp Rd. and Pine and Ashland Sts., Doylestown, Pennsylvania
Coordinates 40°19′01″N 75°07′30″W / 40.31694°N 75.12500°W / 40.31694; -75.12500Coordinates: 40°19′01″N 75°07′30″W / 40.31694°N 75.12500°W / 40.31694; -75.12500
Built 1907 (1907)
Built by Mercer, Henry C.
Architectural style Colonial Revival, Other, Neo-Georgian
NRHP Reference # 85002366
Added to NRHP February 4, 1985

Fonthill, Mercer Museum and Moravian Pottery and Tile Works is a National Historic Landmark District located at Doylestown, Bucks County, Pennsylvania. It consists of three properties built by Henry Chapman Mercer (1856-1930) in a distinctive application of the principles of the Arts and Crafts movement, which are also notable for the early use of poured concrete: Fonthill, the Mercer Museum, and the Moravian Pottery and Tile Works. All three are now museum properties of the Bucks County Historical Society. The landmark designation for the group was made in 1985; each property is also individually listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Henry Chapman Mercer was a native of Doylestown, who was educated as a lawyer. He never practiced law formally, and eventually landed a job as a curator at the University of Pennsylvania Museum. Concerned about the rise of industrialization, he began collecting hand-made artifacts and implements of American life and industry, and also investigated Germany pottery and tile-making techniques. Influenced by the rising Arts and Crafts Movement, he founded the Moravian Pottery and Tile Works in his hometown in 1898. Its tiles met with great success, and have been widely used in the United States. In 1907 he began construction of Fonthill, one of the earliest uses of reinforced poured concrete in the United States. Mercer designed it, as well as the current Mercer Museum, using an organic process. Both of those buildings, as well as the current surviving tile works building, use poured reinforced concrete as the primary building material.

Fonthill is located north of the town center of Doylestown, on the west side of East Court Street, just south of the tile works. Its appearance is loosely based on European medieval castles, and has walls of concrete 2 feet (0.61 m) thick. The exterior is adorned by decorative tiles, the interior is furnished and decorated with Chapman's collections. The house was completed in 1912. It is open for tours by appointment.


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