Joseph Priestley House

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Priestley Avenue side of the Joseph Priestley House in 2007
Map of eastern Pennsylvania showing important locations for the history of Joseph Priestley and the area

The Joseph Priestley House was the American home of 18th-century British theologian, Dissenting clergyman, natural philosopher, educator, and political theorist Joseph Priestley (1733–1804) from 1798 until his death in 1804. Located in Northumberland, Pennsylvania, the house, which was designed by Priestley's wife Mary, is Georgian with Federalist accents. It is now a museum dedicated to Joseph Priestley.

Fleeing religious persecution and political turmoil in Britain, the Priestleys emigrated to the United States in 1794 seeking a peaceful life. Hoping to avoid the political troubles that had plagued them in Britain and the problems of urban life they saw in the United States, the Priestleys built a house in rural Pennsylvania; nevertheless, political disputes and family troubles dogged Priestley during the last ten years of his life.

After the Priestleys died, their home remained in private hands until the turn of the 20th century, when George Gilbert Pond, a professor from what is now Pennsylvania State University, bought it and attempted to found the first Priestley museum. He died before he could complete the project and it was not until the 1960s that the house was first carefully restored by the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission and designated a National Historic Landmark. A second renovation was undertaken in the 1990s to return the home to the way it looked during Priestley's time. The home has been a frequent place of celebration for the American Chemical Society, at which they commemorated the centennial and bicentennial of the discovery of oxygen gas by Priestley as well as the 250th anniversary of Priestley's birth.

Contents

[edit] Location

Following the Seven Years' War (1756–63) and the forced migration of Native American tribes westward, German, Scots-Irish, and other European immigrants settled in the central Susquehanna Valley, including in the area that would become Northumberland, Pennsylvania.[1] Northumberland was laid out around a central village green in 1772, on land originally purchased from the Iroquois by the Province of Pennsylvania in 1768, as part of the first Treaty of Fort Stanwix. During the American Revolution, the village was evacuated as part of the Big Runaway in 1778, and only finally resettled in 1784.[2] In 1794, when the Priestleys moved there, it included Quaker and Wesleyan meeting houses, a brewery, two potteries, a potash manufacturer, a clock maker, a printer (who issued a weekly newspaper), several stores, and approximately one hundred houses.[3]

Map of Northumberland, PA showing the location of the house, railroad, and rivers

The Priestley property, purchased in 1794 at a total cost of £500 from Reuben Haines who had secured the patent to the land for Northumberland,[4] comprised four lots of the original village plan (numbers 29–32). Currently, the house and grounds occupy 1 acre (4,000 m²) at 472 Priestley Avenue.[5] (The address of the house was originally "North Way", but the street was later renamed in honor of Joseph Priestley.[6]) This street forms the northwest boundary of the property; the other boundaries are Hanover Avenue to the northeast, Wallis Street to the southwest, and the North Shore Railroad to the southeast.[5] Beyond the railroad line is a baseball field, and beyond that lies the Susquehanna River, which was the original southeastern boundary of the property. The confluence of the West Branch Susquehanna River with the main (or North) branch of the Susquehanna is a short distance southwest of the property, which is at an elevation of 456 feet (139 m).[7]

The property's original area was 2 acres (8,000 m²),[8] but this was reduced by about half c. 1830 when the Pennsylvania Canal (North Branch Division) was dug through the house's front yard, between the house and river. On May 31, 1860, the Lackawanna and Bloomsburg Railroad opened with a train from Danville. This was the second railroad track in Northumberland, and ran behind the house.[9] The canal closed in 1902 and was later filled in. The modern railroad line approximates the canal's course through the front yard; the track behind the house no longer exists.[5]

[edit] Priestleys in America

Joseph Priestley, painted late in life by Rembrandt Peale, after he had left off wearing his wig American-style (c. 1800)[10]

[edit] Emigration to Northumberland

See also: Priestley Riots

The last three years the Priestleys spent in Britain were a time of political upheaval and the persecution they experienced led to their eventual emigration to the United States. During the Birmingham Riots of 1791, which began on the second anniversary of the storming of the Bastille in the wake of the conservative British reaction against the French revolution, the Priestleys' home, Joseph's church, and the homes of many other religious Dissenters were burned. The Priestleys fled Birmingham and attempted to live in London, but they could not escape the political turmoil.[11] In 1794, they joined the tide of 10,000 emigrants who moved to America—it was the largest emigration from Europe to America until the end of the Napoleonic Wars.[12] The Priestleys left Britain at the beginning of April on the Samson[13] and arrived in New York City on June 4, 1794.[14] Two of their three sons, Joseph, Jr. (eldest) and Harry (youngest), had already emigrated to the United States in August 1793, along with Joseph Priestley's friend, the radical activist Thomas Cooper.[15] Their middle son, William, had moved to America from France at the start of the Reign of Terror.[16]

Although Europeans knew Priestley best as a scientist (he had discovered oxygen gas in 1774), Americans knew him best as a defender of religious freedom and as an advocate for American independence.[17] Immediately upon his arrival, he was fêted by various political factions vying to gain his support. Priestley declined their entreaties, however, hoping to avoid the political discord that had embroiled him in Britain. He wrote to John Adams that he "made it a rule to take no part whatever in the politics of a country in which I am a stranger, and in which I only wish to live undisturbed".[18] (Priestley never became a citizen of the United States.[2][19]) He also turned down an opportunity to teach chemistry at the University of Pennsylvania at this time.[20]

On their way to Northumberland, the Priestleys stopped in Philadelphia, where Joseph gave a series of sermons that helped promote the spread of Unitarianism. According to J. D. Bowers, who studied Priestley's influence on Unitarianism in America, "[f]or a decade Priestley served as the inspiration and leading force in the spread of Unitarianism in America and the formation of numerous societies that followed his teachings on congregational formation, the education of youth, lay preaching, and espousing one's faith in the presence of opposition from (and to) both the Protestant majority and a competing liberal faction."[21] Through Priestley's influence, at least 12 congregations were founded in Maine, Massachusetts, New York, Vermont, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and Kentucky, including the First Unitarian Church of Philadelphia and Northumberland's Unitarian Universalist Congregation of the Susquehanna Valley.[22][23] When he preached, Unitarians and non-Unitarians flocked to hear him and his sermons were published throughout the country.[22] During his years in America, Priestley became increasingly convinced that the Millennium was approaching. His close study of the Bible, together with the happenings in France, persuaded him that he would see Christ's return.[24]

Mary Priestley, by Carl Frederik von Breda (1793)

While Priestley enjoyed preaching in Philadelphia, he could not afford the expense of living there; he also disliked the city's opulent Quakers and feared the yellow fever epidemic that had recently decimated the city.[25] He considered settling in Germantown, which had better access to transportation and communication than Northumberland, but Mary preferred the country and wanted to be near her sons. Joseph considered splitting his time between Northumberland and Philadelphia, but this plan became impractical. Determined to ensure the future economic stability of his family, Priestley bought land and settled in Northumberland by July 1794, which was "five days of rough travel" north of Philadelphia.[26] There they hoped a larger community would eventually blossom.[27]

[edit] Settling in

Priestley seems to have yearned for a more cosmopolitan community than Northumberland provided, writing to his sister that it was "seemingly almost out of the world" and complaining that he had to wait a week for news. He wrote to his friend John Vaughan: "We know but little more than we did when we left you of European affairs."[28] In the winter of 1794–95, Priestley wrote to friends that his situation was very "distant from my original views" and "my time here is far from passing so agreeably as it did in England", yet he was "very thankful for such an asylum" and he attempted "to make the best of my situation".[29] In his letters to friends back in Britain, Priestley consistently referred to himself as an exile and to England as his real home.[30] Mary was happier with the couple's situation and wrote to William Vaughan: "I am happy and thankful to meet with so sweet a situation and so peaceful a retreat as the place I now write from. Dr. Priestley also likes it and of his own choice intends to settle here, which is more than I hoped for at the time we came up...This country is very delightful, the prospects of wood and water more beautiful than I have ever seen before and the people plain and decent in their manners."[31]

When the Priestleys' sons emigrated to America in 1793, they bought 300,000 acres (1,200 km2) of land along Loyalsock Creek (between the North and West Branches of the Susquehanna River). Shortly thereafter, Thomas Cooper, a friend of Joseph Priestley's, published a pamphlet in Britain titled Some Information Respecting America meant to encourage others to settle in Pennsylvania and offering instructions on how to do so. It detailed a clear plan for establishing and financing a settlement. The French translation was, according to one scholar, "carefully phrased in legal terminology" and "lucidly outline[d] an ambitious financial venture".[32] However, it is unclear whether Cooper's scheme was related to the lands that the younger Priestleys had purchased.

A replica (on a smaller scale) of the burning lens owned by Priestley, in his laboratory

Apparently technically unrelated to either of these schemes, but influenced by Cooper's, poets Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Wordsworth, full of idealism and angered at Priestley's treatment in Birmingham, intended to emigrate to America and establish a utopian community which they called "Pantisocracy" (derived from the Greek for "equal rule of all").[33] They assembled 12 couples who were interested not only in demanding physical labor but also in a life of the mind, but none of them had enough money to embark on the project, which required much capital. Therefore the poets undertook a lecture tour of England to raise funds; however, they never generated enough money and never emigrated. The utopia was not built and few immigrants arrived in Northumberland as a result of Cooper's schemes.[34]

After the failure of Cooper's endeavor, Priestley attempted to convince other friends to move to Northumberland, particularly those he had made in America, but to no avail.[35] Priestley wrote in his Memoirs that "the settlement was given up, but being here, and my wife and myself liking the place, I have determined to take up my residence here, though subject to many disadvantages. Philadelphia was excessively expensive, and this a comparatively cheap place; and my sons, settling in the neighborhood, will be less exposed to temptation, and more likely to form habits of sobriety and industry."[31]

[edit] Last years

Priestley's attempts to avoid political controversy in the United States failed. In 1795, the journalist William Cobbett published Observations on the Emigration of Dr. Joseph Priestley, which accused Priestley of treason against Britain and attempted to undermine his scientific credibility. His political fortunes took an even worse turn when Cobbett obtained a set of letters sent to Priestley by the radical printer John Hurford Stone and the liberal novelist Helen Maria Williams. Cobbett published the letters in his newspaper, asserting that Priestley and his friends were fomenting a revolution.[36] Priestley was eventually forced to defend himself in print.[37]

Family matters also made Priestley's time in America difficult. His youngest son Harry died in December 1795, probably of malaria. Mary Priestley died soon after in 1796; she was already ill and never fully recovered after the shock of her son's death.[38] On September 14 of that year Joseph wrote: "This day I bury my wife....she had taken much thought in planning the new house and now that it is far advanced and promises to be everything she wished, she is removed to another."[39] Priestley's family relations deteriorated even further in 1800 when a local Pennsylvania newspaper published an article accusing William Priestley, intoxicated with "French principles", of trying to poison the entire Priestley family—both father and son vigorously denied the story.[40]

Bedroom in the Priestley home, with the couple's china tea set, mantel clock, and chairs

Priestley continued the educational projects that had been important to him throughout his life, helping to establish a "Northumberland Academy" and donating his library to the fledging institution. He exchanged letters regarding the proper structure of a university with Thomas Jefferson, who used the advice when founding the University of Virginia. Jefferson and Priestley became close and when he had completed his General History of the Christian Church,[41] he dedicated it to President Jefferson, writing that "it is now only that I can say I see nothing to fear from the hand of power, the government under which I live being for the first time truly favourable to me."[42] Of all of the religious works Priestley published in the United States, and there were many, it was his four-volume General History that was the most important. Stretching from 475 CE to Priestley's present, he tracked and explained what he saw as the history of Christianity and its "corruptions", referencing his own An History of the Corruptions of Christianity (1772–74). However, he ended it by praising American religious toleration.[43]

Priestley attempted to continue his scientific investigations in America with the support of the American Philosophical Association. However, he was hampered by lack of news from Europe; unaware of the latest scientific developments, Priestley was no longer on the forefront of discovery. Although the majority of his publications focused on defending the outmoded phlogiston theory against the "new chemistry", he also did some original work on spontaneous generation and dreams. As Robert Schofield, Priestley's major modern biographer, explains:

Priestley published more scientific items during his decade in the United States than during all his years in England: some 45 papers, not counting reprintings, and four pamphlets, not counting subsequent editions, but in general his science was now anticlimactic. Few of his papers contributed anything significantly new to the field of chemistry; most were committed to combatting the new chemistry.[44]

Despite Priestley's reduced scientific importance, he stimulated an interest in chemistry in America.[45]

By 1801, Priestley had become so ill that he could no longer write or experiment effectively. On February 3, 1804, Joseph started a last experiment in his lab but was too weak to continue it. He went to a bed in his library, where he died three days later.[46] He was buried in nearby Riverview Cemetery in Northumberland.[47] Priestley's epitaph reads:

Return unto thy rest, O my soul, for the
Lord hath dealt bountifully with thee.
I will lay me down in peace and sleep till
I awake in the morning of the resurrection.[48]

[edit] Architecture and landscaping

T. Lambourne's drawing of the Joseph Priestley house (c. 1800) was discovered in 1983 by Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission researchers.[49]

Joseph and Mary lived with their son Joseph, Jr. and his family in a small house while theirs was being built.[50] Mary Priestley was primarily responsible for the design of the couple's new home and her family inheritance may have helped finance it, but she died before it was completed.[51] By 1797, Joseph's laboratory was completed—the first part of the home to be finished. It was the first laboratory that "he had designed, built, and outfitted entirely himself"[52] and was probably the first "scientifically-equipped laboratory" in the United States.[53] Joseph continued his scientific and scholarly work in his new laboratory, identifying carbon monoxide (which he called "heavy inflammable air").[46][54] In 1798 Joseph Jr., his wife, and their children moved into the new house with Joseph Priestley.[50] The house also held Priestley's library, which contained about 1600 volumes by his death in 1804 and was one of the largest in America at the time.[54] The Priestley family held Unitarian church services in the drawing room and Joseph educated a group of young men until the local Northumberland Academy that he helped found was completed.[55]

The house proper was completed in 1798, with a Mr. Jones of Northumberland as the master carpenter.[56] Built in an 18th-century Georgian style, the "balance and symmetry" of the architecture signaled "subdued elegance".[57] The house was accented with Federalist highlights, such as "the fanlights over the doors and the balustrades on the rooftop belvedere and main staircase", marking it as distinctly American.[58] Douglas R. McMinn, in the National Register of Historic Places nomination for the Northumberland Historic District, calls it a "mansion" that is "probably the finest example of the Federal style in the region".[2] As William N. Richardson, the site administrator for the Joseph Priestley House in the 1990s, notes, Priestley's American home did not resemble his "high-style Georgian town house" that was destroyed in Birmingham; rather, it was "plain" and built in the "American vernacular".[51]

The house has a two-and-half story central section, which is 48 feet (14.6 m) by 43 feet (13.1 m), and two one-story wings on the north and south sides that are each 22 feet (6.7 m) by 21 feet (6.4 m). The first and second floors have a total area of 5,052 square feet (469 m²).[59] The north wing was the laboratory and the south wing (which had an attached woodshed) was the summer kitchen. The cellar, first, and second floors of the central section are each divided into four rooms, with a central hall on the first and second floors; the first floor also has an intersecting hall that leads to the laboratory. The attic has three rooms for servants and a larger room for storage.[5] A paint analysis done in 1994 revealed that the house had no wall paper initially and that the walls and woodwork were painted "a brilliant white".[60]

Lack of skilled craftsmen forced accommodations, like this stairwell likely built from a kit and one step short

The house is a frame structure, covered with white wooden clapboards, anchored to a stone foundation. The Priestleys built their home out of wood, dried in trenches on the site,[2] because no stone or brick was available in the area. Joseph wrote a detailed description of the drying process, concluding: "A house constructed with such boards I prefer to one of brick and stone".[61] This may have prompted journalist William Cobbett to caustically label the house a "shed" in one of his political tirades against Joseph.[62] The central section of the house has a slate gable roof with a railing-enclosed deck. The house has "three internal gable end chimneys, one for the main kitchen", and one each at the north and south ends of the central section.[5]

The house faces the Susquehanna River, and both the front and rear doors are "sheltered by a shallow portico".[5] A circular carriage drive (originally gravel, now concrete) leads to the front door, which also has a fanlight. There are five windows on the second floor on both the front and rear sides of the house, with a dentil cornice above both sets of windows.[5] The external details on the house also include a "frieze board with triglyphs".[2]

Originally, delightful panoramic views were visible from the home. It was built facing the Susquehanna River so that visitors arriving by boat could be welcomed by the family and because conventional 18th-century aesthetic theory held that countryscapes were more beautiful than townscapes. Priestley built a high wall blocking the view of Northumberland and added a belvedere to the top of his house to more easily survey the landscape.[63] His plantings were "a much scaled-down version of the beautiful gardens" at Bowood, the estate of his former employer Lord Shelburne.[64]

The lack of skilled craftspeople in Northumberland made the construction of the house difficult. For example, Richardson speculates that the main staircase was assembled from a kit. It is one step too short for the Northumberland hallway, but no extra step was added to finish off the symmetry of the stairwell, suggesting a dearth of skilled labor.[65]

[edit] Ownership and museum

After the deaths of Mary and Joseph Priestley, Joseph Priestley, Jr. and his wife, Elizabeth Ryland, continued to live in the house until 1811, at which time they emigrated to Britain and sold the home. The house passed through various hands during the 19th century. Judge Seth Chapman purchased the house from Joseph Priestley Jr. on May 13, 1815 for US$6,250. Chapman died on December 4, 1835, and Rev. James Kay, pastor of the Northumberland Unitarian congregation, and his family lived in the house next. James Kay died on September 22, 1847 and his widow likely lived in the house until her October 2, 1850 death. Charles H. Kay, son of James, had purchased the house in 1845, a few years before his parents' deaths.[66] In April 1865 Charles Kay's children sold the house to Henry R. Campbell for $2,775. Florence Bingham purchased the house from Campbell for $5,679.53 on January 18, 1868, and Bingham's heirs sold it to T. Hugh Johnson for $2,000 on October 7, 1882. Kate Scott bought the house for $3,000 on April 11, 1888.[67] In 1911 the last private resident moved out of the house,[68] and it was sublet to the Pennsylvania Railroad for its workers (a large railroad yard was built in Northumberland at this time). This led to a general decline in the house and its grounds.[66]

Priestley's library, with his chess set and globe

Professor George Gilbert Pond was the first person to make a significant effort to establish a permanent Priestley museum at the Priestley House.[69] After raising sufficient funds, he managed to purchase the home at auction for $6,000 from Scott's heirs on November 24, 1919 and intended to move it to Pennsylvania State College (now Pennsylvania State University). However, he died on May 20, 1920 before this plan could be enacted. The college established a memorial fund in his honor and retained the house as a museum, although Pond's children did not formally transfer the house to the college until April 14, 1932.[66] Some restoration of the house was done in the 1920s,[66] and a small, brick building—intended as a fireproof museum for Priestley's books and scientific apparatus—was built on the grounds and dedicated to Pond's memory in 1926.[47][70] On December 14, 1955, the college donated the house to the borough of Northumberland.[71] From 1955 to 1959 the house served as both the borough hall for Northumberland and as a museum.[68] The house proved too costly for the borough to maintain, and was acquired by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in 1961.[50][72] Eventually, in 1968 the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission (PHMC) began restoring it and in October 1970 the museum was opened to the public.[73] The renovations included a restoration of the laboratory, a removal of ornamentation added in the Victorian era, a return of doorways to their original locations, and a return of the shutters "to their original locations inside the windows".[74] The PHMC is supported by the "The Friends of the Joseph Priestley House", who help with the visitor center, tours, special events, and outreach, as well as with clerical and museum work.[75]

Between 1998 and 1999 a renovation that was "one of the most extensive changes in the homestead's history" set out to "restore the grounds around the house to exactly the way it was when Priestley lived" there.[68] This involved reconstructing exact replicas of the original carriage barn, hog sties, horse stalls, gardens, fences, and even the privy. These structures were based on T. Lambourne's drawings of the house and grounds that had been discovered in 1983, other records, and excavations.[76] Priestley left no written description of his laboratory, but much is known of his experiments and late-18th-century laboratories. Extensive research on the laboratory within the house was completed in 1996, including excavations that revealed two underground ovens, as well as evidence of a primitive fume hood.[77] The 1998 renovations also included work to restore the laboratory to a condition as close to its original state as possible.[68][50] There are plans to restore the brick Pond museum as well.[78] The museum is open ten months a year, closing annually between early January and early March. In 2007, the house had 1,709 visitors.[79]

Dennis Lyall's portrait of Joseph Priestley, used on a 1983 stamp

After Joseph's death, Thomas Cooper sold a collection of some of his friend's apparatus and other personal belongings to Dickinson College in Carlisle,[80] which exhibits it each year when presenting the school's Priestley Award to a scientist who makes "discoveries which contribute to the welfare of mankind".[81][82] The house lost its original furnishings when Joseph Jr. and his family moved back to England. Since it is not known what was originally in the home, it is furnished and decorated with artifacts donated by descendants of the Priestleys and with ones similar to those listed in Priestley's testament of what was lost in the fire at his Birmingham home.[83] A number of items that belonged to Joseph and Mary during their lives both in Britain and America are on display throughout the house, including Joseph's balance scales and microscope.[84] Portraits, prints, maps, charts, and books have been carefully selected to replicate the Priestleys' holdings.[85] A bedroom on the second floor is dedicated to an exploration of the life of an 18th-century woman.[83]

On January 12, 1965, the Joseph Priestley House was designated a National Historic Landmark and it was added to the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) on October 15, 1966.[86][87][54] On August 1, 1994, the American Chemical Society named it the second National Historic Chemical Landmark; the dedication ceremony was attended by 75 Priestley descendants.[47][88] In 1988, the Northumberland Historic District, including the Priestley House (which it describes as a "gem" and one of the finest Federal style buildings in central Pennsylvania), was listed on the NRHP. The district includes one other building already on the NRHP: the Priestley-Forsyth Memorial Library, which was built as an inn around 1820 and was owned by a great-grandson of the Priestleys in the 1880s. Today it serves as Northumberland's public library. The Joseph Priestley Memorial Chapel, which is a contributing structure in the historic district, was built in 1834 by his grandson, and is home to a Unitarian Universalist congregation that considers Priestley its founder.[2][89]

[edit] American Chemical Society

The American Chemical Society (ACS) has used the Joseph Priestley House as a place to mark special celebrations. On July 31 and August 1, 1874, "seventy-seven chemists made a pilgrimage to the site to celebrate the centennial of chemistry".[62] The date was chosen to mark the hundredth anniversary of Priestley's experiment producing oxygen by heating mercuric oxide with a magnifying lens and sunlight. These chemists came from 15 US states and the District of Columbia, Canada, and England, and their meeting at the house and a local school "is now recognized as the first National Chemistry Congress, and many ACS historians believe it led to ACS's formation two years later on April 6, 1876".[47][66] On September 5, 1926, about 500 ACS members met again at the home to dedicate the small brick museum and to celebrate the meeting 50 years earlier (two survivors of that first meeting were present).[90]

Representatives of the ACS were present at the October 1970 dedication of the house as a museum.[91] On April 25, 1974 around 400 chemists from the ACS Middle Atlantic Regional Meeting in Scranton came to visit the home. The Priestley Medal, the highest and oldest honor awarded by the ACS, was awarded to Paul Flory at the house that day. (A replica of the Priestley Medal is on display at the house.) On August 1, 1974—what has been labeled the bicentennial of the discovery of oxygen—over 500 chemists attending the third Biennial Conference on Chemical Education at State College traveled to the house to celebrate "Oxygen Day". In October 1976, the ACS celebrated its own centennial with a celebration in Northumberland. A 100-plus piece replica of Priestley's laboratory equipment, made by universities, corporations, and the Smithsonian Institution, was presented to the house for display.[91] On April 13, 1983, ACS President Fred Basolo spoke at the house to celebrate Priestley's 250th birthday and as part of a first day of issue ceremony for the United States Postal Service's Joseph Priestley commemorative stamp.[92] In 2001 the ACS again met at the house to celebrate the 125th anniversary of the society, and reenacted parts of the 1874 and 1926 celebrations, including a march to Priestley's grave, at which each participant left a red rose.[47][93]

Panorama of front side of the Joseph Priestley House, facing the Susquehanna River (southeast). Structures from left to right are: Privy, Carriage Barn (now Visitors Center), wood sheds (all reconstructed), Summer Kitchen (attached to Kitchen), Kitchen wing, Main House, passage to Laboratory, Laboratory wing, and Pond Museum (built in 1926 of brick). Note circular driveway in foreground.
Panorama of front side of the Joseph Priestley House, facing the Susquehanna River (southeast). Structures from left to right are: Privy, Carriage Barn (now Visitors Center), wood sheds (all reconstructed), Summer Kitchen (attached to Kitchen), Kitchen wing, Main House, passage to Laboratory, Laboratory wing, and Pond Museum (built in 1926 of brick). Note circular driveway in foreground.

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Hirsch, 25; Bell, 517–18.
  2. ^ a b c d e f McMinn, "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Northumberland Historic District" (PDF).
  3. ^ Schofield, 346–47; Kieft, 7.
  4. ^ Schofield, 347; Richardson, "Current Interpretation", 21.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Greenwood, "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Joseph Priestley House (PDF)".
  6. ^ Bell, 515–45.
  7. ^ ""Detail Report: Joseph Priestley House"". http://geonames.usgs.gov/pls/gnispublic/f?p=gnispq:3:::NO::P3_FID:1214615. 
  8. ^ Glazer, "Scientist Discovered Oxygen".
  9. ^ Kieft, 11; Bell, 531.
  10. ^ Schofield, 347.
  11. ^ Schofield, 317–21.
  12. ^ Hirsch, 25; Graham, 1.
  13. ^ The ship's name was the Samson according to Kieft (7), but Schofield (324) has it as the Sansom.
  14. ^ Schofield, 324.
  15. ^ Graham, 29.
  16. ^ Kieft, 6.
  17. ^ Schofield, 326.
  18. ^ Qtd. in Graham, 39.
  19. ^ Richardson, "Current Interpretation", 22
  20. ^ Schofield, 324–32; Graham, 39–40, 48–50, 64.
  21. ^ Bowers, 2.
  22. ^ a b Bowers, 3.
  23. ^ Priestley Chapel History: The Beginning
  24. ^ Garrett, "Priestley's Religion", 12.
  25. ^ Richardson, "Joseph Priestley's American Home", 62, 67.
  26. ^ Kieft, 7.
  27. ^ Schofield, 346; Graham, 60–61; Richardson, "Joseph Priestley's American Home", 62.
  28. ^ Qtd. in Graham, 61; see also 64–65.
  29. ^ Qtd. in Graham, 68; see also 71, 76.
  30. ^ Graham, 80.
  31. ^ a b Qtd. in Kieft, 7.
  32. ^ Kelly, 219.
  33. ^ Kelly, 218–20.
  34. ^ Hirsch, 20–21; see also Schofield, 329–30.
  35. ^ Schofield, 346; Richardson, "Joseph Priestley's American Home", 62.
  36. ^ Schofield, 329–38; Graham 53–54, 110–14.
  37. ^ Priestley, Joseph. Letters to the inhabitants of Northumberland and its neighbourhood, on subjects interesting to the author, and to them. Parts I & II. Northumberland [Pa.]: Printed for the author by Andrew Kennedy, 1799.
  38. ^ Schofield, 348.
  39. ^ Qtd. in Kieft, 8.
  40. ^ Schofield, 405–06.
  41. ^ Priestley, Joseph. A General History of the Christian Church. Northumberland: Printed for the author by Andrew Kennedy, 1803.
  42. ^ Qtd. in Schofield, 339–43.
  43. ^ Schofield, 390–92.
  44. ^ Schofield, 354.
  45. ^ Schofield, 352–72.
  46. ^ a b Suplee, Joseph Priestley: Discoverer of Oxygen.
  47. ^ a b c d e MacDermott, 43–44.
  48. ^ Qtd. in Schofield, 401.
  49. ^ Hirsch, 26.
  50. ^ a b c d Silverman, Joseph Priestley: Catalyst of the Enlightenment".
  51. ^ a b Richardson, "Joseph Priestley's American Home", 63.
  52. ^ Hirsch, 27.
  53. ^ Richardson, "Joseph Priestley's American Home", 61.
  54. ^ a b c Richardson, "Current Interpretation", 20.
  55. ^ Hirsch, 40–41; Richardson, "Joseph Priestley's American Home", 61.
  56. ^ This chronology follows Hirsch, Kieft, and Richardson, "Joseph Priestley's American Home", however McMinn gives the completion date for the whole house as 1797; Richardson, "Joseph Priestley's American Home", 63.
  57. ^ Hirsch, 28.
  58. ^ Hirsch, 29.
  59. ^ If the cellar and attic are included, the total area of the house is 9,180 square feet (853 m²).
  60. ^ Richardson, "Current Interpretation", 23.
  61. ^ Qtd. in Kieft, 8
  62. ^ a b Hirsch, 30.
  63. ^ Hirsch, 30, 37.
  64. ^ Hirsch, 37.
  65. ^ Richardson, "Joseph Priestley's American Home", 64.
  66. ^ a b c d e Kieft, 11–12.
  67. ^ Hirsch, 30; Kieft, 11; Richardson, "Joseph Priestley's American Home", 64.
  68. ^ a b c d Glazer, "Extensive Changes Underway at Priestley House".
  69. ^ Hirsch, 31; Richardson, "Joseph Priestley's American Home", 64.
  70. ^ Hirsch, 31; Richardson, "Joseph Priestley's American Home", 65.
  71. ^ Hirsch, 31; Kieft, 13.
  72. ^ Kieft, 13.
  73. ^ Hirsch, 31; Kieft, 13; Richardson, "Joseph Priestley's American Home", 65.
  74. ^ Kieft, 14; The main entrance to the house was also moved to the river side (the original front door) from the Priestley Ave. side (the original back door).
  75. ^ Kieft, i.
  76. ^ Hirsch, 26, 32.
  77. ^ Hirsch, 31–32.
  78. ^ Hirsch, 47.
  79. ^ Bashore, 2
  80. ^ Paul, 19; for a more extensive discussion of the college's holdings, see Peter M. Lukehart, "The Early History of the Joseph Priestley collection at Dickinson College", Joseph Priestley in America, 1794–1804. Ed. Peter M. Lukehart. Carlisle, PA: Trout Gallery, Dickinson College (1994).
  81. ^ Joseph Priestley Celebration
  82. ^ Paul, 19.
  83. ^ a b Hirsch, 32–33.
  84. ^ Hirsch, 41.
  85. ^ Hirsch, 39.
  86. ^ "Joseph Priestley House National Historic Landmark Summary Listing".
  87. ^ "Joseph Priestley House", NRHP Reference #66000673.
  88. ^ Hirsch, 31, 33; Richardson, "Current Interpretation", 20.
  89. ^ Richardson, "Current Interpretation", 21.
  90. ^ Hirsch, 30–31; Kieft, 12–13; Richardson, "Current Interpretation", 20.
  91. ^ a b Kieft, 14.
  92. ^ Kieft, 15–16.
  93. ^ Richardson, "Joseph Priestley's American Home", 61, 65.

[edit] Bibliography

  • Bashore, Andrea. "Message From The Director" Postings From Priestley House: Newsletter of The Friends of Joseph Priestley House 42 (Fall 2008): 2–3.
  • Bell, Herbert C. "Northumberland". History of Northumberland County, Pennsylvania, Including its Aboriginal History; the Colonial and Revolutionary Periods; Early Settlement and Subsequent Growth; Political Organization; Agricultural, Mining, and Manufacturing Interests; Internal Improvements; Religious, Educational, Social, and Military History; Sketches of its Boroughs, Villages, and Townships; Portraits and Biographies of Pioneers and Representative Citizens, etc.. Chicago: Brown, Runk & Co., 1891. Retrieved 4 November 2007.
  • Bowers, J. D. Joseph Priestley and English Unitarianism in America. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2007. ISBN 027102951X.
  • Garrett, Clarke. "Priestley's Religion". Joseph Priestley in America, 1794–1804. Ed. Peter M. Lukehart. Carlisle, PA: Trout Gallery, Dickinson College, 1994.
  • Garrett, Clarke. "Which Cooper? The Site of Coleridge's Utopia on the Susquehanna". John and Mary's Journal 5 (1979): 17–28.
  • Glazer, Mike. "Extensive Changes Underway at Priestley House: Renovations will Recall the Past". Williamsport Sun Gazette (13 December 1998): B1, B7.
  • Graham, Jenny. Revolutionary in Exile: The Emigration of Joseph Priestley to America, 1794–1804. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 85 (1995). ISBN 0871698528.
  • Hirsch, Alison Duncan. Joseph Priestley House: Pennsylvania Trail of History Guide. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books, 2003. ISBN 0-8117-2629-0.
  • Kelley, Maurice W. "Thomas Cooper and Pantisocracy". Modern Language Notes (April 1930): 218-20.
  • Kieft, Lester. Joseph Priestley and the Priestley House. 2nd ed. Northumberland, PA: The Friends of the Joseph Priestley House, 2006.
  • Park, Mary Cathryne. "Joseph Priestley and the Problem of Pantisocracy". Proceedings of the Delaware County Institute of Science 11 (1947): 1–60.
  • Paul, E. Robert. "Joseph Priestley: A Scientific Virtuoso". Joseph Priestley in America, 1794–1804. Ed. Peter M. Lukehart. Carlisle, PA: Trout Gallery, Dickinson College, 1994.
  • Richardson, William N. "The Current Interpretation of the Joseph Priestley House". Joseph Priestley in America, 1794–1804. Ed. Peter M. Lukehart. Carlisle, PA: Trout Gallery, Dickinson College, 1994.
  • Richardson, William N. "Joseph Priestley's American Home". Proceedings and Addresses of the Northumberland County Historical Society 32 (1994): 60–70.
  • Schofield, Robert E. The Enlightened Joseph Priestley: A Study of His Life and Work from 1773 to 1804. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2004. ISBN 0271024593.

[edit] External links

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