Visitors entering Coffeyville from the south have long been awed by
the sight of the three-story 16-room W.P. Brown home. Listed on the National
Register of Historic Places, the beautiful home is situated in a commanding
position atop a hill. Inviting first and second-story verandas grace the
south and west sides. An ornate portico tops the porte cochere. These
and other features have caused the home to be labeled the “Brown
Mansion” ever since its completion in 1906.
The main floor includes a two-story entry, living room, parlor, music
room, library, conservatory, dining room, billiard room, kitchen, and
maid’s quarters. Five bedrooms and three full baths are on the second
floor. The entire third floor is a ballroom which at times served as a
schoolroom and gymnasium for the Brown’s son. A full basement houses
the butler’s quarters, laundry, heating system, walk-in-icebox,
wine cellar, and storage rooms.
The 20-inch-thick brick and concrete walls serve as insulation for the
gas heating system. Chandeliers are powered by both gas and electricity.
Some rooms have original handpainted canvas wall coverings. Tiffany leaded-glass
accents the main doorway, and a signed Tiffany chandelier in the dining
room is believed to have been hung by the designer personally.
The mansion is furnished with much of the original furniture used by
the Browns. They purchased some pieces from Marshall Field of Chicago
and Sloans of New York; other pieces were obtained during family trips
to Europe.
W.P. Brown began plans for this lovely Coffeyville home around the turn
of the century, contracting with the architectural firm of Wilder and
Wight of Kansas City, Missouri. As both Edward Wilder and Thomas Wight
had worked and studied with Stanford White, the Mansion has similarities
to several of White’s designs, such as the Patterson Mansion on
DuPont Circle in Washington, D.C. and to the library he designed in Chattanooga,
Tennessee.
The Inglenook in the Brown Mansion is similar to the one White designed
for his friend Louis Comfort Tiffany.
Like typical Stanford White structures, the mansion has many fireplaces,
all of different designs. Because Mr. Brown owned a lumberyard as well
as having oil and gas interests, the mansion was completed at a wholesale
cost of only $125,000.
|