Virginia: Difference between revisions

Public wiki for the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition
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{{short description|Virginia State Building}}
{{short description|Virginia State Building}}
{{Infobox prepared food
{{Infobox FairBuilding
| name            = Virginia State Building
| name            = Virginia State Building
| image            = Virginia State Building.jpg
| image            = Virginia State Building.jpg
| image_size      = 300px
| image_alt        =
| image_size      = 400px
| caption          = Virginia State Building
| caption          = Virginia State Building
| alternate_name  =  
| alternate_name  =  
| country          =  
| location        = [[The Trail]]
| creator          =
| no_buildings    = 1
| course          =
| construction_cost= $17,000 (${{Format price|{{Inflation|US|17,000 |1904}}}} in {{Inflation/year|US}})
| cost            = $17,000 ({{Inflation|US|17,000|1904|fmt=eq}})
| furnishing_cost  =  
| admission        =  
| profit          =  
| profit          =  
| owner            =  
| owner            =  
| main_ingredient  =  
| architect        = C. Mornton Mayre, of Washington, D. C.
| variations       =  
| dimensions       = 133' x 99'
| calories        =  
| adult_entry      =
| child_entry      =
| opening_day      =
| dedication_day  =
| special_day      =
| other            =  
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}}
}}
Virginia is represented among the State buildings on the World's Fair by a reproduction of Monticello (Little Mountain),
Virginia is represented among the State buildings on the World's Fair by a reproduction of Monticello (Little Mountain),
the home of the President who directed the purchase of Louisiana. The building covered an area of 113 by 99 feet. It had a picturesque site off the [[Plateau of States]] leading from the Palace of Fine Arts to the Foreign Buildings.
the home of the President who directed the purchase of Louisiana. It had a picturesque site off the [[Plateau of States]] on [[The Trail]].


==Etymology==
==Description==
 
The Virginia Building was a replica of Monticello. The bright red of the bricks was simulated, and contrasted with the white woodwork. Jefferson had in mind the Grand Triannon seen by him in [[France]] when he planned the house. France reproduced that building at the Exposition, and the similarity of the facades can be noted.
==Before the Fair==


==Description==
The grand salon was entered first, with its high-pitched ceiling and its gallery, giving the only access from one side of the house to the other of the second floor rooms. Acoustic properties were in Jefferson's mind when he planned that room, for he was a musician of tender susceptibilities. At one side was a Conover grand piano.
Mr. Jefferson was an enthusiastic student of architecture, and an amateur draughtsman, who brought back from his foreign tours many
studies of famous old buildings.


It contained a life size statue of the Jefferson, contributed by the University he founded.
To the right is a colonial parlor, in which there is not an article less than one hundred and fifty years old.


Virginia had exhibits in Agriculture which included one of tobacco, which featured an Indian maiden standing on a pedestal 23 feet high and holding in her outstretched hand a bundle of tobacco.
Back from the entrance is the University of Virginia room. In the original Virginia Building Monticello it was the state dining-room. There are oils of General J. B. Stuart and General Robert E. Lee, and the Gait statue.


The Forestry, Fish, and Game exhibit included: 28 by 30" transparencies, they were used to illustrate forest scenes.
In the state dining-room of the reproduction is the only French furniture. In the balance of the house the furnishings are pure colonial.  


In The Mines palace, there were award -winning exhibits that included- ores of gold, silver, lead, iron, asbestos, kaolin, mica, clays, zinc, manganese, talc, etc., while exhibits of marble, rough and sculptured, together with cubes of building stones and mineral waters were displayed.
It contained a life size statue of the Jefferson, contributed by the University he founded.


==After the Fair==
==After the Fair==
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[[Category:Plateau of States]]
[[Category:The Trail]]

Latest revision as of 21:59, 30 November 2022

Virginia State Building
LocationThe Trail
No. of Buildings1
Construction
Construction Cost$17,000 ($512,707 in 2021)
Architecture
ArchitectC. Mornton Mayre, of Washington, D. C.
Dimensions133' x 99'


Virginia is represented among the State buildings on the World's Fair by a reproduction of Monticello (Little Mountain), the home of the President who directed the purchase of Louisiana. It had a picturesque site off the Plateau of States on The Trail.

Description[edit | edit source]

The Virginia Building was a replica of Monticello. The bright red of the bricks was simulated, and contrasted with the white woodwork. Jefferson had in mind the Grand Triannon seen by him in France when he planned the house. France reproduced that building at the Exposition, and the similarity of the facades can be noted.

The grand salon was entered first, with its high-pitched ceiling and its gallery, giving the only access from one side of the house to the other of the second floor rooms. Acoustic properties were in Jefferson's mind when he planned that room, for he was a musician of tender susceptibilities. At one side was a Conover grand piano.

To the right is a colonial parlor, in which there is not an article less than one hundred and fifty years old.

Back from the entrance is the University of Virginia room. In the original Virginia Building Monticello it was the state dining-room. There are oils of General J. B. Stuart and General Robert E. Lee, and the Gait statue.

In the state dining-room of the reproduction is the only French furniture. In the balance of the house the furnishings are pure colonial.

It contained a life size statue of the Jefferson, contributed by the University he founded.

After the Fair[edit | edit source]

See also[edit | edit source]

Notes[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]

External links[edit | edit source]