Harman Patil (Editor)

Hamilton Place (Columbia, Tennessee)

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NRHP Reference #
  
73001812

Area
  
4 ha

Added to NRHP
  
16 July 1973

Opened
  
1832

Built by
  
Nathan Vaught

Nearest city
  
Columbia

Hamilton Place (Columbia, Tennessee)

Architectural styles
  
Greek Revival architecture, Georgian architecture

Similar
  
Rattle and Snap, Ashwood Hall, St John's Episcopal Church, Elm Springs, Athenaeum

Hamilton Place is an antebellum plantation house in Maury County, Tennessee, near Columbia.

The house was completed in 1832. It was built for Lucius Junius Polk, a wealthy cotton planter who served as a state senator and later as Tennessee's adjutant-general, by master builder Nathan Vaught. The Palladian design of its front facade is based on Palladio's design for the Villa Pisani at Montagnana. The interior floor plan was loosely based on the White House floor plan, and an interior arcade is styled after a design by Brunelleschi for a hospital in Florence, Italy.

Hamilton Place was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973. It is across the highway from Rattle and Snap, the house built in 1845 for Lucius J. Polk's brother George Washington Polk.

References

Hamilton Place (Columbia, Tennessee) Wikipedia