Daily Press

Chesapeake Bay mansion ‘a treasure’

Ex-Whitehall owner wants people to see it, feds to help with upkeep

- By Frederick Kunkle

ANNAPOLIS, Md. — When Horatio Sharpe, the colonial governor of Maryland, started work on Whitehall in the 18th century, the story goes that he hoped the palatial villa on the Chesapeake Bay would win his beloved’s heart. Alas, the young woman fell for Sharpe’s friend and personal secretary.

But Whitehall’s most recent owners now hope to woo the American people — and perhaps tap Uncle Sam for some help keeping it up.

Long overshadow­ed by grander and more accessible cousins such as Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello, Whitehall could become a main attraction in the proposed Chesapeake National Recreation Area, according to lawmakers and others pushing for the federal designatio­n.

The Annapolis site would offer visitors a jumping-off point to explore the bay’s paradoxica­l history as the birthplace of American democracy and slavery. The National Register of Historic Places lists it as “a major milestone in American architectu­ral history,” too, because of the scale and quality of a classical design that predated Monticello. Draft legislatio­n would allow the National Park Service to acquire or partner with Whitehall and other designated sites on the bay.

The idea of transformi­ng Whitehall into a national destinatio­n also has the blessing of Charlie Scarlett, one of the last people to reside there.

“This is home for me,” he said during a recent tour. “And I love everything about it.”

His late father, Charles E. Scarlett Jr., a Baltimore shipping executive with a love for history, bought Whitehall in 1946 and spent more than a decade restoring the structure to its original design — down to hand-painted wallpaper imported from China. He lived at Whitehall with his wife until their deaths.

Charlie Scarlett, who oversees the family-run Brandywine Foundation that owns the property, is taking steps to open Whitehall to the public. Partly, his motivation is practical: He said the nonprofit organizati­on struggles with the enormous cost of maintainin­g a nearly 260-year-old building.

But Scarlett, 70, a business executive who lives in St. Louis, said he also believes Whitehall should become more accessible to all Americans, including the many descendant­s of enslaved people who lived and worked there, because of its historical significan­ce.

If Congress incorporat­es the bay into the national park system, Scarlett envisions Whitehall becoming a national attraction modeled on the nonprofit-owned Mount Vernon or managed by the National Park Service within a network of landmarks, such as those in San Francisco’s Golden Gate National Recreation Area.

Scarlett has even considered allowing Brandywine to sell his former home to the federal government. The foundation’s most recent publicly available income tax form values the property at $7.8 million.

“You know, if you’d asked me 10 years ago, I would have said, ‘Hell no.’ But that was 10 years ago,” Scarlett said. The manor’s leaking roof — which has caused extensive water damage — alone costs nearly $1 million to repair, he said.

Unlike Jefferson and others whose homes have become national shrines, Sharpe was a British loyalist. He was born in Yorkshire to a large, prominent family whose connection­s likely played a role in his appointmen­t as governor by Lord Baltimore, according to the Maryland Historical Society.

Sharpe also received a captain’s commission in the Royal Marines, rising to lieutenant colonel with an infantry sent to the West Indies — an experience that made him a wise choice to run the colony on the eve of the French and Indian War. He was 35 when he sailed from England, accompanie­d by his private secretary, the Oxford-educated John Ridout, according to the 1912 book “A Colonial Governor In Maryland,” by Lady Matilda Ridout Edgar.

Legend has it that Sharpe set about building Whitehall in late 1764 to impress Mary Ogle, the daughter of a previous governor, according to a 1951 article by Charles Scarlett Jr. She fell for the younger Ridout, who eventually married her.

Sharpe hired the best architects to build Whitehall and oversaw its constructi­on, using enslaved Africans and indentured European laborers, including a skilled woodcarver who died of tuberculos­is before he could earn his freedom.

The building’s design influenced Monticello, the James Semple House in Williamsbu­rg and other colonial homes.

Lady Ridout’s book describes Sharpe’s 1,000acre estate humming with activity, much of it performed by slaves, in welltended gardens, orchards, a sawmill, a brickyard and a workshop that spun cotton, flax and wool.

In 1773, Sharpe sailed for England, expecting to return to Whitehall, though he never did. He entrusted his beloved villa to Ridout, sometimes sending back cuttings for its vineyards or often writing to check up on affairs there, Lady Ridout wrote. In one letter, Sharpe granted Ridout freedom to sell enslaved workers if necessary, directing that they go only to purchasers “you are well assured will treat them with Humanity.”

Upon Sharpe’s death in 1790, John Ridout inherited Whitehall, and his heirs held onto it until 1895. After

that, the property changed hands several times, including an early 20th-century purchaser who considered offering it as a summer White House for the president. By the time the Scarlett family bought Whitehall, the place was in disrepair.

In recent years, their family foundation has cobbled together a variety of business ventures, including using the now-115-acre site as a wedding venue. It hosts as many as 12 weddings a year for a $19,000 fee, part of which is shared with a wedding planner that handles the other arrangemen­ts. Other income comes from boarding horses ($500 a head per month) and renting out a small, 17th-century cottage ($500 a night on weekends). But it’s nowhere near enough to cover capital expenses and needs, such as the roof repair.

To defray the cost, Sens. Chris Van Hollen and Ben Cardin, Maryland Democrats, secured $500,000 in fiscal 2023 for Whitehall’s restoratio­n, as part of a $10.2 million package of local investment­s. The foundation also obtained a $100,000 preservati­on grant in 2021 from the Maryland Historical Trust, an agency within the state Department of Planning.

The Scarletts’ foundation has applied for inclusion in the agency’s Chesapeake Bay Gateways Network and explored a future partnershi­p with the National Park Service to open Whitehall to the public.

Charlie Scarlett said possible options include creating a ferry service between Annapolis and Whitehall Creek west of the manor. Visitors probably would board at Burtis House, a former waterman’s home that also is expected to be a focal point in the proposed national recreation area. (Others include Thomas Point Shoal Lighthouse and Fort Monroe’s North Beach in Hampton, where ships delivered enslaved Africans in 1619, as pivotal attraction­s anchoring the new park.)

“I think what makes it interestin­g from a historian’s perspectiv­e is, it’s a place where you can get a close connection to the loyalist story,” said Mary-Angela E. Hardwick, vice president of education and interpreta­tion for Historic Annapolis, a nonprofit organizati­on that operates a museum and colonial houses.

Wendy O’Sullivan, superinten­dent for the National Park Service’s Chesapeake office, said the Brandywine Foundation has sought recognitio­n as a Gateway site but so far has not qualified because the site is not fully open to the public. She said the Park Service has been consulting with the foundation on how that could happen.

In the meantime, Scarlett said his family tries to accommodat­e requests for visits on an informal basis, as well as archaeolog­ical research, while planning for a future that could allow many more Americans to experience his former home.

“It’s a treasure,” he said.

 ?? JONATHAN NEWTON/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Whitehall Manor in Annapolis will become a key destinatio­n for visitors exploring the Chesapeake Bay if the nation’s largest estuary becomes part of the national park system.
JONATHAN NEWTON/THE WASHINGTON POST Whitehall Manor in Annapolis will become a key destinatio­n for visitors exploring the Chesapeake Bay if the nation’s largest estuary becomes part of the national park system.

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