There sits a house on Round
Hill Road in Greenwich, 30 Round Hill Road to be exact, with a fascinating
history, a house that has been home to many interesting and accomplished
residents.
Our guide into the history
of this house is John E. Nelson, who in March 2014 was interviewed by Constance
B. Gibb for the Greenwich Oral History Project.
John Henry Twachtman, oil on canvas |
In the early 1960s there was
always a Porsche parked in the driveway of this house, which caught the
attention of Porsche-lover John Nelson every time he drove by. Nelson, a former
maritime lawyer with Burlingham Underwood & Lord, first laid eyes on the
home, known by locals as “the Twachtman House,” somewhere around 1964. As he
describes it:
I drove down that dirt path… and looked north to see
the
full façade of the house. I felt like I was
discovering Atlantis.
It
was so beautiful. I can see it in my mind’s eye to this day,
the
afternoon sun about four o’clock on an October afternoon
coming
across the balustrades, all of the grape arbor with the
Stanford
White portico…I was simply blown away.
In fact, Nelson was so taken
with the house, at the first opportunity, he bought it.
Situated on a manmade pond,
which never would have been brought into existence under Greenwich’s current
wetlands regulations, the house has undergone renovations and small expansions
over the years, and yet still retains its original character and charm. Beyond
the house one could find terraces, pastures, an old barn, a portico and
Horseneck Brook—a true playground for the children who have grown up there over
the years.
Nelson
was not the first to fall in love with this home, which has captivated and
housed the likes of Jim Henson[1]
and local, late-1800s American Impressionist artist John Henry Twachtman.
The artist, John Henry Twachtman, courtesy of the National Park Service, Weir Farm |
One day, a full eight decades before Mr. Nelson’s excursion down that small dirt path, John Henry Twachtman was out on an excursion of his own, fishing with his son in Horseneck Brook, in what was then known as the Hang Root[2] section of Greenwich. After a short walk through the cut and up a small hill, Twachtman first laid eyes upon the house now addressed at 30 Round Hill Road. “This is it,” he exclaimed, “this is the house.”
Other painters in the Cos Cob
painting community took inspiration from the house and grounds as well, with
other works being painted there by notable artists such as Childe Hassam, J.
Alden Weir, and Theodore Robinson.
In 1971, John Nelson and his then
wife, Emily, had made plans to move from their home in New York City to
Greenwich. After seeing 50 or 60 homes
with their real estate agent, they were finally ready to put in an offer on a
nice Colonial in Cos Cob. But, as fate
would have it, something gave John a pause, and after viewing nearly 60 houses,
John opened up to his agent and expressed his desire for more unique and artsy,
one-of-a-kind type home.
In what can only be described as
fate, John and Emily Nelson soon found themselves face to face with Jim and
Jane Henson, the then owners of the Twachtman House—or “the Porsche House” as
it had always lovingly been referred to by the Nelsons since John’s days of
cruising by in the early 60s. After a hilarious mix-up, which involved John
Nelson unknowingly trying to kidnap Heather Henson, a six-month old baby whom
he believed to be his own six-month old daughter, Heather Nelson, a handshake
deal for the home was made and fate was sealed. The Nelsons closed on the house
and moved in that October.
As Nelson recounts, when he took
over the Twachtman house from Jim Henson, the eccentricities and playful humor
of the man (Henson) were reflected in the home which had housed him, his wife
and his five children from 1963-1971.
There was a puppet theater in the living room, a swirled mirrored
decoration in the bathroom and an above ground pool out back. The upstairs
shower leaked water that came through the kitchen ceiling, so one could always
find a bucket to catch the water doubling as the centerpiece for the kitchen
table as the family of seven gathered around to eat. But even after moving from
Round Hill Road, Jim Henson remained connected to the home through his ongoing
friendship with the Nelsons.
Connection is a theme that runs
throughout the history of this house.
Twachtman felt it that day fishing with his son. John Nelson felt it
that perfect autumn afternoon back in October of ’64. Even ten years later at a
dinner party in the city, Nelson found himself next to Cora Weir Burlingham,
daughter of J. Alden Weir, who vividly recounted her connection to the house
through her vivid memories as a young girl playing with the Twachtman children at
their home.
Whether it be called the Twachtman
House, the Porsche House or simply the house at 30 Round Hill Road, this home
has provided shelter, inspiration, and has given its owners a real sense of
pride.
As John Nelson puts it: “I consider
that I’m a trustee of this house. It’s just [on] my watch right now.”
[1] Jim
Henson (James Maury Henson, 1936-1990) had a varied career, but possibly
is best-known as the creator of the “Muppets”—large puppet characters used
in the PBS children’s show “Sesame Street,” which was launched in 1970,
and later, the popular TV series for adults, “The Muppet Show.” His
best-known Muppets are Kermit the Frog, Big Bird, and Miss Piggy.
[2] Hang
Root—Nils Kerschus, a researcher at the Greenwich Historical Society,
identifies Hang Root as a small community located between Round Hill Road and
Lake Avenue, where Round Hill Road crosses Horseneck Brook. The inhabitants
were African-American; most were unskilled day laborers; one operated a small
farm. Twachtman (who was white) purchased one of the small houses late in the
19th century, and subsequently rented it to another white man, who, like
Twachtman, was an artist. The African-American residents gradually sold their
properties, and the black community disappeared.
Prepared by Erin E. Adams, Greenwich Oral History Project volunteer
Constance B. Gibb's interview of John E. Nelson, "The Twachtman House," March 2014, is available through the Greenwich Oral History Project office located on the lower level of the Greenwich library or in the reference area on the first floor.
For additional information pertaining to the early Black settlement in Greenwich known as Hang Root, please contact Nils Kerschus, researcher at the Greenwich Historical Society: http://www.greenwichhistory.org
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