NRHP Reference # 72000400 Designated CP January 12, 1984 Area 1 ha Added to NRHP 7 November 1972 | Built 1853 Designated NHL November 7, 1973 Opened 1853 Phone +1 706-884-1832 | |
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Address 204 Ben Hill St, LaGrange, GA 30240, USA Hours Open today · 10AM–1PM, 2–5PMThursday10AM–1PM, 2–5PMFriday10AM–1PM, 2–5PMSaturday10AM–1PM, 2–5PMSundayClosedMondayClosedTuesday10AM–1PM, 2–5PMWednesday10AM–1PM, 2–5PM Architectural style Greek Revival architecture Similar Hills and Dales Estate, LaGrange Art Museum, Biblical History Center, Lamar Dodd Art Center, Ocmulgee National Monument |
Bellevue is a historic mansion house at 204 Ben Hill Street in LaGrange, Georgia. Built in 1853-55, it was the home of Senator Benjamin Harvey Hill, and is one of the state's finest examples of Greek Revival architecture. Now a historic house museum, it was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1973, and is a contributing structure in Broad Street Historic District.
Description and history
Bellevue is located in central LaGrange, on an oval parcel located at the north end of Ben Hill Street, and flanked on both sides by McClendon Circle. It is a two story wood frame structure with a two-story Greek temple front, featuring six fluted Ionic columns with capitals set at an angle, and a heavy multi-level entablature below a dentillated cornice. Set within the temple front is a second-floor balcony with a turned balustrade, and a center entrance recessed in an opening flanked by pilasters and topped by an entablature. Ells extend the house, joining it to what was once a separate kitchen building.
Bellevue, originally a 1,200-acre (490 ha) plantation estate, was established in 1853 by Benjamin Harvey Hill, one of Georgia's leading politicians of the antebellum and Civil War era. Its architect is only known by his last name, Taylor, and is one Georgia's finest example of antebellum Greek Revival architecture. Hill (1823–82), was a highly regarded orator and politician, who opposed secession in the years prior to the Civil War. When Georgia did secede from the Union, he served in the Senate of the Confederacy, and was opposed to Reconstruction Era legislation after the war. His house is now owned by the LaGrange Women's Club, which offers tours of the house and rentals for special events.