The historic buildings and streets that make up the Battersea Neighborhood form a homogenous streetscape. The neighborhood fabric in historic Petersburg, Virginia results from the accumulation of thousands of decisions on the part of city officials, developers, contractors, original owners, and subsequent occupants over more than three hundred years. These districts have resembled living organisms, adapting to dramatically changing conditions with grace and even beauty. While a few buildings, like John Bannister's Battersea villa, are singled out for their architectural design and detailing, the vast majority take part in a collective design tradition shared and understood between their builders and their users. The usual stylistic distinctions never made more than superficial inroads. These structures share certain similarities that make them recognizable as having been built in Petersburg, even though they share features with houses in other parts of Virginia and the nation.
Map of Petersburg's growth through 1820 showing Pride's Field/Battersea to the left. Battersea villa is shown at the upper left. [Gibson Worsham and Dolly Holmes for StudioAmmons] |
Overview of Petersburg's Urban History
Downtown Petersburg from the air |
Two-story double house from the late nineteenth century. |
Detail of copy of 1830 plat of Pride’s Field Plat of 1830 (Petersburg Clerk's Office) |
The History of the Neighborhood
The Pride’s Field tract between New Town and Battersea was laid out in lots as part of a speculative suburban development on the high ground around Petersburg. Major Peter Jones sold his 140-acre share of the Abraham Wood grant to entrepreneur William Pride in 1745. Pride developed a mill and ferry at the Narrow Falls on the Appomattox River. Pride’s Field was the site of a famous race track, opened before 1766, one of four tracks that served as important recreational venues for the local population during the period just before the American Revolution.
Detail, Plat of Pride’s Field, 1830 (Petersburg Clerk's Office)
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The canal extended in a seventy-five-foot right-of-way down the middle of Upper Appomattox Street. West Street, north of the canal, served as the access from Cox Road to the east-west streets, although the main bridge over the canal was on Dunlop Street. The earliest residences were intended for industrial and other workers and were grouped near the mills and the canal basin. They appear to date from the 1830s to the 1850s. A developer would buy several hundred-foot wide lots and create a miniature subdivision of tiny one-sixteenth-acre lots.
Antebellum double house at 985 Commerce Street |
Map of Expansion of the western suburbs after 1830 [Gibson Worsham and Dolly Holmes for StudioAmmons] |
Additional sections were added to the neighborhood at the west end during the mid- to late nineteenth century. The street grid was extended as far at Battersea Lane. The entire neighborhood was speculative, and like many of its kind it did not meet any strong need for housing at the time and took many decades to fill up. Wealthy mill owners and others acquired multiple lots on West High Street for large houses and gardens like the frame house at 827 West High Street. These lots were not subdivided for new housing until the late nineteenth century or later.
As the city progressively developed in the post-Civil War years, the dominant building type became the two-story house, usually combined in a double form. These straddled a central lot line to create matching front and back yards, often with corresponding outbuildings. The mature double house, with a wide front porch, four or six opening on the front, and often an integral shed across the rear, increasingly lined the western sections of the neighborhood and remains the most common building type throughout the neighborhood. The house is found in two forms: the wider version utilizing the double-pile, side-passage plan, in which an entrance hall inside the front door contains the stair, and the narrower, double-pile, single-cell plan, in which the stair is located in the main room. Individual houses of each type were identified as belonging to one of three scale levels: small, medium, or large
View west on Washington Street |
Birds eye view of the neighborhood today. The central industrial spine divides it into two residential sections. |
As the city developed, so did the concept of street infrastructure. Some features of the neighborhood evolved by common understanding and others were regulated by ordinance. Streets were 60 feet wide and by the early twentieth century were lined with concrete curbs and concrete driveway entrances off the street to the rear of most lots. There are few, if any, alleys. While public water, fire hydrants, and gas were provided, there were no storm sewers. Streetlights were rare in the suburbs until well into the twentieth century and were likely incandescent teardrop-shaped lights suspended by cables over the most active intersections. By the third quarter of the century brighter mercury- or sodium-vapor lights were attached to wooden poles at intervals along the streets.
Lot layout in Battersea (Andrew Marshall for StudioAmmons) |
The areas in front of each house were often fenced and planted with some sort of ornamental landscaping. By the early twentieth century, residential neighborhoods in the city were provided, in most cases, with sidewalks and paved streets. Narrow concrete walks led from the sidewalk to the house. Domestic outbuildings, consisting, among others, of henhouses, woodsheds, and storage buildings, were placed in the private yard to the rear. As automobiles became widespread, those who could afford them often erected small garages to the rear of their houses.
Battersea has suffered the loss of a considerable part of its traditional building fabric. Adverse economic and demographic conditions have resulted in the gradual decay of many others. In site of this, the city’s historic significance and the enduring quality of its architecture support the potential for a renewal that will enable older neighborhoods to better serve their existing populations and to attract new residents that share community goals.
These urban assets provide strong reasons to ensure, not only careful rehabilitation, but also thoughtful infill projects. Increased critical awareness among property owners, planners, and developers of existing patterns could help recover the clarity and meaning that give form and purpose to both the neighborhood and the city.
Appendix: Building Types
Mixed Use Buildings
For more than a century, the basic tissue of the city of Petersburg was the commercial building. At first these buildings, located along the streets near the river, were detached frame buildings of one or two stories, sometimes raised on a masonry basement. After the great fire of 1815, much of the city was rebuilt in continuous rows of brick buildings. These new buildings were at the same time the stores, workshops, or warehouses and the homes of the merchants and craftsman who operated them. Domestic life in Petersburg was largely lived at the second floor level, where noise and dust were reduced and a lively view of the street was possible from windows and balconies. Store/dwelling (mixed use building) at Dunlop and Commerce in the Battersea Neighborhood |
Even when a block began by accommodating residential tissue, like Washington Street west of Brickhouse Run, the inherent rules of planning permitted its full or partial transformation into commercial fabric as the city grew to the south and west. Everyday access to downtown stores was not sufficiently convenient as the neighborhood began to grow after the Civil War. Owner-occupied businesses like the one seen here would first make an appearance on the corners most likely to attract customers. As the twentieth century progressed, the commercial tissue, by this time only one-story in height, expanded toward the center of the block. Had Petersburg continued to grow in that direction, commercial buildings would have eventually filled that entire block. Meanwhile, isolated stores, such as the one seen at the corner of Commerce and West, would continue to make an appearance on busy corners where there was a need or opportunity.
William S. Simpson Jr. watercolor of a mixed use building |
Dwellings
Small double houses were built as tenements for the housing of workers in Petersburg’s early industries. As tobacco factories, iron foundries, and water-powered flour and cotton mills were built in the 1830s, the need for skilled workers increased. The tradition of the double house appears to have begun as housing for workers in the various industries and are clustered near the great antebellum industrial centers- along the tailrace of the canal basin and along the river above and at the falls. One 1/2-story, double, single-cell dwellings were built on tiny lots subdivided from the original half-acre lots in Pride’s Field. Matching ells and dependencies extend to the rear of each half house. The houses use the traditional Virginia convention of the half-story garret with dormers serving as an upper-floor chamber.
Synoptic Table of house forms in the neighborhood (Andrew Marshall and Gibson Worsham for StudioAmmons) |
From about 1870 to 1910, scores of two-story, frame double side-passage-plan houses were built by developers, usually in groups of two. These buildings, which are alomost always two rooms deep, were built at a range of scales. The largest double houses had six-bay facades and were given decorative cornices, doorways, and porches. Rooms were about 20 feet square, while medium sized houses, with rooms about 16-18 feet square, were given simpler detailing. The smallest side-passage-plan houses were plainly detailed and had four-bay facades and rooms of 15 feet square or less. Double side-passage-plan houses from this period were less frequently built on one-story version. As in the antebellum period, the smallest two-story houses did not have room for a passage but were of a single room in width.
In addition to the house in its single and double form, other house forms appeared in Battersea from an early date. Landowners built detached dwellings that were part of the same architectural tradition as those in the surrounding rural areas. House forms known as the one-room house, the hall-chamber or two-room house, and the center-passage-plan house were built in one- and two-story examples and in depths of one and two rooms. Variations of the same types were built as late as 1920. Many dwellings today still mimic these regional vernacular forms in plan and elevation.
Churches in the Battersea neighborhood |
Special buildings are those structures that serve the community as a whole or larger elements within it or that are designed to appear as if they did. Buildings such as courthouses, schools, and theaters are made with permanent materials, expensive finishes, and highly developed forms. The Battersea neighborhood, remote from the city center, was provided with few civic or public buildings. Most major denominations made it their business to establish congregations in the new neighborhood. These soon built churches, often beginning with small frame structures on secondary streets. Later, two larger brick Gothic churches with brick towers and a Classical Revival temple form church, both on Washington Street, were constructed as earlier congregations grew. The Seaboard Air Line Railroad Station facing Upper Appomattox Street is a very specialized public building type. Although poorly maintained today, it is architecturally distinguished and might someday be an important part of the neighborhood’s public life.
Historic Battersea, 1768 (Palladian Society) |
Seidenburg & Co. Cigar Factory, 1906 . Industrial building with tower at entrance, now multifamily residential |
Mills, factories, and other industrial buildings were built on a wide variety of sites through the city, including in and around the Battersea neighborhood. At first most mills, which usually depended on water power for their operation, looked similar, as the small scale of local industry did not require buildings much larger than a house. As mills grew larger and tobacco factories and later industrial buildings were constructed away from access to water, they still required a regular grid of timber structure on the interior for maximum flexibility of function, massive masonry wall on the exterior for stability, and regularly spaced windows for light and ventilation. The need to keep all the workers near light sources encouraged the buildings to take a rectangular form and to be no wider in the shorter sides than three structural bays. Often a tower was constructed at one end to give easy access to the various floors and to house a bell that sounded the start and stop of work. As the types of industry grew more diverse and complex, buildings were extended and the towers were augmented by tall water tanks.
Historic View of Titmus Optical Industrial Complex along Commerce Street |
The foregoing account is derived in part from the Battersea Design Guidelines prepared at StudioAmmons in Petersburg, Virginia in 2013. The study was funded by a grant from the Virginia Housing and Development Authority and was executed by Gibson Worsham and Andrew Marshall under the supervision of Terry Ammons.