“History is the novel whose author is the people.”
~ Alfred de Vigny
~ French poet
~ 1797 ~ 1863
The splendor of a late September afternoon sashays around the
historic George Taylor House, nestled in the beauty of early autumn in
Catasauqua, Pennsylvania. The George Taylor Mansion, as it is also called, was
the 18th century summer residence of Taylor, a signer of the
Declaration of Independence.
George Taylor (1716 ~ 1781) came to America from the British
Isles. He later became the ironmaster of the Durham Iron Works in Bucks County,
Pennsylvania. It was in 1768, in what is now Catasauqua, that he built his
mansion, designated a National Historic Landmark in 1971.
It was restored under the direction of John K. Heyl in 1966 ~
1968 and is open to touring visitors as an historic house exhibit.
A Justice of the Peace in Northampton County and Colonel in
the Continental Army, George Taylor was a delegate to the Second Continental
Congress 1776 ~ 1777. He signed the Declaration of Independence on August 2,
1776.
Situated on five acres in a
park-like setting overlooking the historic Lehigh River Canal, the George
Taylor House is a two-story Georgian stone mansion with symmetrically-paired
brick-end chimneys and a gable roof with flattened ridge. Just behind the house
is a one-and-a-half story brick summer kitchen, which was rebuilt around 1850.
The house was
purchased by the Borough of Catasauqua in 2009 from the Lehigh County
Historical Society. The home is run in partnership with Catasauqua Borough by
the George Taylor House Association.
The house is in close proximity to the Deily
Coal Yard Trailhead of the Delaware & Lehigh National Heritage Corridor
(D&L Trail) in Catasauqua. Running from Wilkes-Barre to Bristol, the D&L
Trail passes through the Lehigh and Delaware Rivers and their canals in
Pennsylvania.
The historic Parsons-Taylor House in Easton, Pennsylvania was
built between 1753 and 1755. It was built for William Parsons and later
inhabited by Founding Father George Tayor, who died there in 1781.