请输入您要查询的百科知识:

 

词条 Harrison Phoebus
释义

  1. Biography

  2. References

  3. External links

Harrison Phoebus (1840–1886) was an American 19th century entrepreneur and hotelier who became the leading citizen and namesake of the town of Phoebus in Elizabeth City County, near Fort Monroe, which is now part of the independent city of Hampton, Virginia.

Biography

Phoebus was the son of the Reverend Lewis and Sally (née Ross) Phoebus, youngest of sixteen children; his mother was the third wife of Lewis Phoebus.[1]

A native of Somerset County, Maryland, Harrison Phoebus served in the Union Army during the Civil War. After the war, he became an employee of Adams Express Company, where he gained a reputation for diligence and flexibility.

In 1866, he was transferred to become the resident agent for Adams Express at Old Point Comfort in Elizabeth City County, Virginia. He has been described by author Parke S. Rouse, Jr. as a "one-man industry", serving as Old Point's representative of shipping companies, postmaster, notary public, insurance agent and U.S. commissioner. Much of his work was related to the steamships which plied the Chesapeake Bay on routes and routinely docked there.[2]

In 1874, with financial backing from Samuel Shoemaker, a wealthy friend from Baltimore, he acquired the luxurious Hygeia Hotel.[1] The red four-story Victorian structure built in 1868 was the second on the site, rebuilt from an earlier hotel of the same name built in 1820 by William Armstrong while Fort Monroe was under construction. Managed by Marshall Parks of Norfolk, the earlier Hygeia had served until it was demolished by the Union Army in 1862 during the Civil War.[2]

Phoebus built additions to his hotel, chartered boats to bring visitors, and soon Old Point Comfort was on its way to becoming a place where diplomats and government officials mingled with the elite of Baltimore, Philadelphia, Richmond and the Deep South. Amenities he added included hydraulic elevators, gaslights, electric call bells in each bedroom, and bathrooms on every floor. He installed several types of therabpudic baths intended for medicinal purposes, a popular feature of the era.[2]

Harrison Phoebus is credited with persuading Collis Huntington's Chesapeake & Ohio Railway to extend its tracks of the Peninsula Subdivision from Newport News to the community. The railroad named its station and post office after him. The Hygeia attracted many dignitaries and celebrity visitors including P.T. Barnum and U.S. president Ulysses S. Grant.[3]

Harrison Phoebus died suddenly of a heart ailment on February 25, 1886 at the age of 45. He was interred at the cemetery of St. John's Episcopal Church in Hampton.[2] After the community of Chesapeake City became incorporated as a town in 1900, it was renamed "Phoebus" in his honor. [4] After Phoebus's death and the opening of the new Chamberlin in 1896 the Hygeia began to fall into disrepair. In 1902, Secretary of the Army Elihu Root signed an order authorizing the demolition of the Hygeia Hotel to make space for a planned expansion of Fort Monroe. The Army's planned addition to Fort Monroe never materialized and eventually the vast empty space was seeded in grass and made into a park.[3]

Roseland Manor, a Châteauesque Queen Anne-style mansion designed by Arthur Crooks and situated on a well landscaped estate overlooking Hampton Roads, that Phoebus was having built for his family was completed after his untimely death. For nearly a century the Gilded Age mansion stood as a community landmark until it was destroyed by fire in 1985.[5]

References

1. ^{{cite encyclopedia |work=Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography |article=Harrison Phoebus |volume=4 |pages=289–292 |year=1915 |url=https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Page:Encyclopedia_of_Virginia_Biography_volume_4.djvu/385}}
2. ^Rouse Jr., Parke, The Good Old Days in Hampton and Newport News, 1986, Dietz Press, Richmond, Virginia
3. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.dailypress.com/features/history/our-story/dp-hygeia-hotel-at-old-point-comfort-20130830-post.html|title=Lost Old Point Comfort landmark once helped define Hampton Roads|first=Mark St. John Erickson, merickson@dailypress.com |last=757-247-4783|publisher=|accessdate=21 March 2017}}
4. ^{{cite news| url=http://hamptonroads.com/2010/02/whats-name-phoebus| last1=Wiltrout| first1=Kate| date=March 1, 2010| title=What's in a Name? Phoebus| work=The Virginian-Pilot| accessdate=October 16, 2015}}
5. ^{{cite web| url=http://www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/Counties/Delisted_Resources/114-0003_Roseland_Manor_nomination_delisted.pdf| title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Roseland Manor| publisher=Virginia Department of Historic Resources| accessdate=October 16, 2015}}

External links

  • {{Internet Archive author |sname=Harrison Phoebus}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Phoebus, Harrison}}

12 : 1840 births|1886 deaths|People of Maryland in the American Civil War|American hoteliers|People from Somerset County, Maryland|People from Hampton, Virginia|Place of birth unknown|Place of death missing|People from Elizabeth City County, Virginia|Businesspeople from Maryland|Businesspeople from Virginia|19th-century American businesspeople

随便看

 

开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。

 

Copyright © 2023 OENC.NET All Rights Reserved
京ICP备2021023879号 更新时间:2024/11/11 7:48:04