Everything about Armsmear totally explained
Armsmear ("meadow of arms"), also known as the
Samuel Colt Home, is a historic house located at
Hartford, Connecticut. It was the family home of firearm manufacturer
Samuel Colt and is now a
National Historic Landmark.
Armsmear was planned for Colt's 1856 marriage to Elizabeth Hart Jarvis, and constructed in 1856 to designs by an unknown architect, possibly local architect Octavius Jordan or factory engineer H. A. G. Pomery, on grounds overlooking the recently completed
Colt Armory. It was described by a contemporary thus: "an Italian villa in stone, massive, noble, refined, yet not carrying out any decided principle of architecture, it's like its originator, bold and unusual in its combinations." It features a low-pitched roof, heavy
bracketed cornice, round-arched doors and windows, iron balconies, Italianate tower and details, and Turkish domes and pinnacles.
The Colts occupied Armsmear in 1857 and promptly began to develop its gardens. Landscape architects
Cleveland and Copeland provided the plans. Unusual, glass-domed conservatories, inspired by London's
Crystal Palace, were added in 1861-1862. Ultimately the estate contained some 2,600 linear feet of greenhouses, as well as ponds, fountains, and a deer park.
After Elizabeth Colt died in 1905, the house was converted to a home for Episcopalian women (in 1911) under the terms of her will. She also gave 140 acres of Armsmear's grounds to create Hartford's
Colt Park. The city has subsequently replaced the greenhouse, garden, and ponds with ball fields and a skating rink.
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