Daily Southtown

Oh-this-old-thing elegance

Neo-Georgian home appears to be love a letter to nature lovers and British country estates of long ago

- By Julie Lasky

Keith Meacham moves eagerly to greet a visitor, accompanie­d by two ecstatic spaniels. In a loose pink cotton shift that patrols the border between chic and ease, she leads her guest into a screened porch filled with rattan chairs and flowers foraged from the woods around her home.

Her toenails are painted blue. She is a paragon of insouciant, oh-thisold-thing elegance, and so is the weekend retreat she shares with her husband, Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Jon Meacham, 53, and their three children.

Wrapped in a mantle of forest on the campus of Sewanee: the University of the South, the neo-Georgian house has jeweltoned interiors, William Morris wallpaper, moody photograph­s of pears and, here and there, a bird’s nest. To the charmed visitor, it appears to be a love letter to British country estates of long ago and the nature-obsessed eccentrics who ambled through them.

Keith Meacham, 52, is the co-founder of an online design business called Reed Smythe & Co. that sells the kinds of artifacts — sometimes the very things — that decorate the home. She has filled a comical ceramic vase that has human features with scavenged mountain laurel, honeysuckl­e, ferns and maple seedlings and laid a table with stemless goblets and speckled dishes. The vase is by Los Angeles artist Matthias Vriens-McGrath and is sold at her shop; the plates are from the Parisian design boutique La Tuile à Loup; and the handblown glassware is modeled on 18th-century wineglasse­s.

“I love mixing these green glasses with an unexpected color tablecloth,” she said about the pinkand-yellow paisley fabric, a vintage Indian textile that complement­s the peonies, hellebore and rhododendr­on arranged in the centerpiec­e.

“But it looks great.”

In November, Reed Smythe opened its first brick-and-mortar boutique 90 minutes away, in Nashville, Tennessee, where the Meacham family principall­y lives. Sewanee, with its cool mountain air and bursts of birdsong, is for weekends and holidays.

How the Meachams got there is quite a story. Keith Meacham was a high school senior from the Mississipp­i Delta who had been offered a scholarshi­p to Sewanee, as the school is familiarly known. Jon Meacham, a native of nearby Chattanoog­a, Tennessee, was a freshman there.

In Jon Meacham’s version of events, as narrated by his wife, the admissions dean suggested that he talk to this “smart girl” when she visited the campus and try to persuade her to attend. But when Jon Meacham went to a reception to meet her and saw a pretty girl sitting in the corner, he thought he would hang out with her while he waited for the smart girl to show up. Eventually, he realized they were the same person.

That is not the punchline. This is the punchline: After her visit, Keith Meacham sent Jon Meacham a gracious thank-you note letting him know that she had decided to go to the University of Virginia.

The couple correspond­ed regularly for the next several years but seldom saw each other. Only after they both relocated to Washington, D.C., did they form a romantic attachment.

They later settled in New York City, where Keith Meacham worked as an educator and eventually joined the team that founded Homer, a technology company that produces educationa­l software. Jon Meacham made his name in journalism and rose to the editorship of Newsweek magazine.

The couple enjoyed living on the Upper East Side but missed the lush greenery of their natal South. Both were able to take off the month of July, so they found their way back to Sewanee.

For a few years, they rented a cottage in nearby Monteagle. Then, two years after the birth of their second child, in 2006, they bought this house, a sober brick building dating from the late 1920s or early 1930s that had been owned by the headmaster of the Sewanee Military Academy. In 2012, they decided to relocate full time to Tennessee.

Their first major gesture when they acquired the property was to double its size by adding a two-story screened porch. The addition sinks the family into cool, verdant depths downstairs and turns into a pleasantly percussive instrument upstairs when rain hits the roof.

“All destinatio­ns lead to the porch in the summer,” Keith Meacham said. “We live out there, entertain there, read out there, eat every meal.”

Reed Smythe was the inspiratio­n of Keith Meacham’s best friend, Julia Evans Reed, a New Orleans-based journalist and author of books about design, entertaini­ng and Southern culture and politics. She, too, had grown up on the Mississipp­i Delta and made her way to New York, where she and Keith Meacham formed a bond.

The two women shared a love of scouting for vintage finds and commission­ing decorative objects from artisans, particular­ly in the South. Together they developed the business as a digital platform, using their family names. (Keith Meacham’s — Smythe — rhymes with “blithe.”)

Shortly before Reed Smythe was founded, in the fall of 2018, Reed was diagnosed with cancer. She died in August 2020. In her obituary for Garden & Gun magazine, where she had been a columnist, Jon Meacham wrote: “If we’d tried to invent a character like Julia, nobody would have believed it. She was a tsunami of talent, charm and energy.”

Recalling events she planned with Reed when they were sisters in entertaini­ng in New York, Keith Meacham said: “We were talking about a lot more than what we were going to serve at the party, and who was going to come. It was really about how you forge new friendship­s and how you create a space that’s welcoming.”

 ?? KENDRICK BRINSON/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS ?? The mountain home of Jon and Keith Meacham is wrapped in a mantle of forest on the campus of Sewanee: the University of the South.
KENDRICK BRINSON/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS The mountain home of Jon and Keith Meacham is wrapped in a mantle of forest on the campus of Sewanee: the University of the South.
 ?? ?? Keith Meacham works in the screen-porch dining room of her mountain home May 12 in Sewanee, Tennessee.
Keith Meacham works in the screen-porch dining room of her mountain home May 12 in Sewanee, Tennessee.

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