Synopses & Reviews
This volume tells the story of the stately Italianate Galveston mansion known as Ashton Villa. Built in 1859, Ashton Villa stood out in antebellum Galveston for its extensive use of new materials: brick and cast iron. It has weathered many a storm, including the Great Hurricane of 1900, when floodwaters invaded its first floor. Now as a historic house museum, Ashton Villa speaks eloquently about the lives and aspirations of an upper-class Texas family in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Synopsis
The stately Italianate mansion known as Ashton Villa is the oldest of the few survivors from the days when Broadway, the locus of wealth and power in Galveston, was a street lined with magnificent Victorian homes. Begun in 1859, Ashton Villa stood out in antebellum Galveston for its extensive use of new materials: brick and cast iron.
About the Author
Kenneth Hafertepe of Baylor University is also the author of the TSHA publications Abner Cook and A History of the French Legation in Texas.