by Erin Doane, Senior Curator
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Map
of the City of Elmira from actual surveys by G.M. Hopkins, C.E., 1865 |
Jervis Langdon was an entrepreneur, an
abolitionist, a philanthropist, and the father-in-law of Samuel Clemens (aka
Mark Twain). In 1863, he bought property from Anson E. Ely at the northwest
corner of Church and Main Streets in Elmira. Jervis’s family lived there for
over 75 years and the home became known as the Langdon Mansion. We currently
have the exhibit “Grand, Domestic and
Truly Comfy” on display here at the museum through May 2025 which showcases
the mansion and its furnishings.
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Residence
of Anson C. Ely. Photograph, early 1860s, courtesy of the Mark Twain House
& Museum |
Jervis had major renovations made to his new home
soon after he purchased it. The original was in the Greek Revival style. It was
cube shaped with wood siding and a square cupula on top. Had had the structure
enlarged and transformed into a three-story Italianate brownstone with several
wings that telescoped from the back. Throughout the years, the Langdon family
made more changes to the home, including adding a porte-cochere and expanding
the veranda in the 1890s.
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The
Langdon Mansion around 1900 |
So, what did Jervis Langdon see when he looked out
from his home across Church and Main Streets in 1865? To the east, across Main
Street, sat Trinity Episcopal Church which was founded in 1833. The church
itself was built between 1855 and 1858. It was constructed entirely of brick,
including its steeple, which is unusual. In fact, it is one of only 11 churches
in the world with a brick steeple.
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Trinity
Episcopal Church, 1860s |
South of Trinity Church, across Water Street, was
the First Baptist Church. The church we see on that corner today is a massive
brick building, but when Jervis first took up residence in the neighborhood, it
was a much more modest wooden structure with a square steeple. It was
originally built in 1830 and expanded in 1847. After a devastating fire, the
new, larger brick church was built in 1892.
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First
Baptist Church, 1870s |
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First
Baptist Church, 1890s |
In the 1860s, there was still a burial ground next
to the First Baptist Church. By the 1850s, they were running out of space for
burials next to the church so Woodlawn Cemetery was created in 1858. Church
sextant John W. Jones began moving graves from the First Baptist burial ground
to Woodlawn Cemetery immediately after it opened but the task was not finished
until 1877.
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First
Baptist burial ground, c. 1860 |
There were also strips of park land on either side of Main Street south
of Church Street. It was probably nice for Jervis to have a park right across
the street. His own property could be described as park-like, as well, with
hundreds of trees and shrubs, flower beds, gravel paths, decorative urns, and
fountains on the property. His wife, Olivia, personally oversaw the development
and maintenance of the landscaped grounds.
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View
of the Langdons’ gardens, c. 1875 |
South of the Langdon Mansion, across Church Street
and west of the park, was the Park Church. In 1846, 41 abolitionists broke from
the First Presbyterian Church over the issue of slavery and formed the
Independent Congregational Church of Elmira. Jervis and Oliva were among the
founding members of the new church. The congregation built a white wooden
church in 1851. Rev. Thomas K. Beecher arrived in 1854 and served as pastor until
his death in 1900. By the 1870s, the congregation had grown so large that a new
church was constructed - the large brick structure we see there today.
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The
Park Church and inset portrait of Rev. Thomas K. Beecher in 1854 |
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The
Park Church, 1905 |
Jervis Langdon passed away in 1870 and would not
have seen most of the changes that made the intersection of Church and Main
Streets what we see today, like the two large brick churches that dominate the
area. The Langdon Mansion itself was torn down in 1939. We can, however, still
enjoy of some of Jervis’s original view including the cool green space of Wisner
Park and the red brick of Trinity Church’s steeple.
Very interesting. Love all the pictures of the past and present. Having the exhibit at the museum with the furnishings from the mansion is awesome to get a view of what it must have been to visit the Langdon's
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