Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Neely Mansion

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Area
  
less than one acre

NRHP Reference #
  
74001955

Phone
  
+1 253-833-9404

Added to NRHP
  
15 October 1974

Built
  
1894

Opened
  
1894

Architectural style
  
Victorian architecture

Neely Mansion

Location
  
Highway 18near Auburn, Washington

Address
  
12303 SE Auburn-Black Diamond Rd, Auburn, WA 98002, USA




Similar
  
White River Valley Museum, Emerald Downs, Wild Waves Theme Park

Profiles

Neely mansion auburn wa


The Neely Mansion, is a Victorian-style residence built in 1894. It located near the eastern edge of Auburn, although it is actually located in unincorporated King County, Washington in the census-designated location Lake Morton-Berrydale, Washington. It is listed in the National Register of Historic Places and the Washington State Heritage Register.

Contents

From the 1950s to the 1970s the building deteriorated severely, until local citizens moved to save and restore the building. During the initial restoration period, the mansion was used for a haunted house staffed by the drama department of Auburn High School (the only high school in Auburn at the time). That usage ceased when significant progress was made in restoring the mansion to its original condition. The mansion is now owned by a volunteer historical society.

Design

The Mansion is two-story clapboard with a square plan. The front doorway is centered between two windows with three widows the other three sides. All have an entablature and decorated surrounds. Sawn scrollwork is placed below each lintel. A decorative corbel table separates the first and second floors. There are side porches on the ground level that run the length of the house. The front porch has a second floor balcony covered by a gable. The interior of the boxed, pedimented gable cornice is filled with diamond pattern shingles with a central round window.

Interior

The house has high ceilings and spacious rooms. The first floor is the kitchen, dining room, parlor, and master bedroom. The second floor has more bedrooms. The lower five feet (1.5 m) of the walls in the house are covered with maple paneling. The upper portion is white plaster. Lighting in the house was supplied by candles and oil chandeliers which were hung from the ceiling and could be raised and lowered by hand. Before World War II electricity was added, and in 1948 it was reshingled, a new foundation provided, and a concrete base added to the front porch.

Neely family

The David Neely family was among the first to arrive in Washington's Green River Valley. After having made a hazardous overland journey from Tennessee in 1853, they crossed the Naches Pass and arrived at Porter's Prairie near Enumclaw in Washington territory. He settled in Kent. He and his family both avoided being killed by Indians who attacked the area in 1855. David Neely's son Aaron moved to Auburn, married; and a daughter Lenore, born in 1879. Soon after the birth, Aaron moved to the site of the Neely Mansion, which he and a few workmen built in 1894. Many gala parties were held for friends and neighbors who would spend the night in the house during shopping excursions to Auburn. On those occasions, all of the doors on the lower floor would be opened and the dancing partners would swirl from room to room to the music provided by the local fiddlers.

Significance

The Neely Mansion is significant piece of house architecture in that it demonstrates the effect of readily available manufactured wooden decorative components on a very basic plan. It is significant also as an indicator of growing affluence in family areas close, to Seattle and as an important social center for the Green River Valley.

References

Neely Mansion Wikipedia