Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Samuel Taylor Suit Cottage

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Built
  
1885

Opened
  
1885

Phone
  
+1 304-258-4000

Added to NRHP
  
28 November 1980

NRHP Reference #
  
80004035

Area
  
4,047 m²

Architectural style
  
Victorian architecture

Samuel Taylor Suit Cottage

Location
  
WV 9, Berkeley Springs, West Virginia

Address
  
276 Cacapon Rd, Berkeley Springs, WV 25411, USA

Architects
  
Alfred B. Mullett, Snowden Ashford

Similar
  
Museum of the Berkeley, Prospect Peak, Berkeley Springs State Park, Berkeley Castle, John Herbert Quick Ho

The Samuel Taylor Suit Cottage, also known as the Berkeley Castle, is located on a hill above Berkeley Springs, West Virginia. The castle-like house was built for Colonel Samuel Taylor Suit of Washington, D.C. as a personal retreat near the spa town, beginning in 1885. It was not complete by the time of his death in 1888 and was finished in the early 1890s for his widow, Rosa Pelham Suit, whom Suit had first met at Berkeley Springs. The post 1888 work is of noticeably inferior quality.

The fifteen-room interior features a ballroom 50 feet (15.2 m) wide and 40 ft (12.2 m) long. The design is attributed to Washington architect Alfred B. Mullett, who is alleged to have drawn a rough sketch of the plan on a tablecloth at the Berkeley Springs Hotel. The design may have been based on elements of Berkeley Castle in Gloucestershire, United Kingdom. Detailed design and construction supervision was carried out by Snowden Ashford, who designed Washington's Eastern Market. Mrs. Suit entertained lavishly at the house until her money ran out and the property was sold in 1913.

Snowden Ashford, also credited as an architect, apprenticed for Mullett.

The house is now privately owned and is available for rentals for special occasions.

References

Samuel Taylor Suit Cottage Wikipedia