The Pepper Mansion |
Unknown to most office workers today that traverse K Street
and Connecticut Avenue is that up until the 1920s, what is now high rise office
buildings was once the most socially important residential neighborhood of the
city. Oversized mansions and spacious
lawns lined K Street in the nineteenth century.
Three of these were built at 1701 to 1705 K Street facing Farragut
Square that were designed in 1873 by Adolph Cluss, who would occupy the center
townhouse himself; the elaborate Second Empire corner mansion (left) was built for
Alexander “Boss” Shepherd, but purchased later by two very socially prominent
families.
Much has been written and attributed to Gov. Alexander R.
Shepherd (1835-1902), who made a fortune in real estate speculation in this
city following the Civil War. He became
infamous during his tenure as the head of the Board of Public Works beginning
in 1871, directing $30 million in contracts to close acquaintances before
becoming Governor of the District.
However, the depression of 1873 and corruption charges by Congress led
to his removal from office in 1874, and personal bankruptcy.
With the mansion being just a year old, it languished in the
court system until the owner of a $45,000 private mortgage note on the house,
George Seckel Pepper (1808-1890) of Philadelphia, right, petitioned to obtain title to
the house in 1876. The Shepherd legacy
reappeared, however, when it was discovered that his note only covered the
front portion of the house, and excluded a twenty foot extension of the house
that featured a picture gallery. The
court also discovered that Shepherd had also obtained a $35,000 mortgage from
Mary J. Gray for the same property.
The legal situation took almost two decades to resolve, at
which time the house was leased to the Russian Legation and as a residence for
its Minister. Pepper eventually gained
title to the house, but not until 1890.
He was a philanthropist and lawyer who had graduated from the College of
New Jersey in 1827. He was left a large
estate by his father and devoted himself to its management and to philanthropic
work focusing primarily on the financial concerns of Philadelphia He also
served as the President of the Academy of Music and of the Academy of Fine Arts,
and upon his death, bequeathed half of his $2 million estate to the University
of Pennsylvania, the Free Library, and the Academy of Art.
Susan Draper |
The corner mansion at 1705 K Street was sold in 1890 to
General William F. Draper (1842-1910), the same year he married his second
wife, the former Susan Preston. Draper
was a well known Union General during the Civil War. Susan was the daughter of Major General
William Preston of Kentucky, a Major General in the Confederate Army during the
Civil War. This is perhaps the only case on record of a General of the Union
Army marrying a daughter of a General of the Confederate Army. To tie the families even closer, Susan’s
sister Jessie married William’s brother, George Albert Draper.
William’s first wife was Lydia D. Warren Joy Draper, whom he
married in September of 1862 and had five children; William Franklin Draper Jr.,
George Otis Draper, Edith Draper, Arthur Joy Draper, and Clare Hill Draper. Lydia died in 1884.
William Draper |
Draper spent four years in the Civil War in a remarkable
career that eluded both serious injury and death. In the Burnside Expedition he became
signal-officer on the general's staff, engaging in the battles of Roanoke
Island, New-Berne, and Fort Macon when he was promoted first lieutenant and
returned to his regiment. In August,
1862, he was commissioned captain in the Thirty-sixth Massachusetts and went
through the rest of the Antietam campaign and battle of Fredericksburg, and was
then sent to Newport News. In June,
1863, he joined Grant's army at Vicksburg, taking part in the capture, and subsequently
in the march to Jackson and the fighting in that locality. His regiment was
reduced, from fighting and sickness, from six hundred and fifty in June to one
hundred and ninety-eight in September.
The war over, he then engaged in the manufacture of cotton-machinery, forming a company with his father called George Draper & Sons. A mechanical expert, he received a record fifty patents on various implements and machinery that created a fortune.
1887 Hopkins Map |
He served as colonel on the staff of Governor John Davis
Long from 1880 to 1883, and was elected himself as a Republican to the
Fifty-third and Fifty-fourth Congresses (March 4, 1893-March 3, 1897). He was also appointed an Ambassador and
Minister Plenipotentiary to Italy from 1897-1899. His daughter Margaret from his second
marriage met and married Prince Andrea Boncompagni-Ludovisi-Rondinell-Vitelli
of Italy in a lavish ceremony at the K Street house in 1916.
William Draper died before the wedding, however, on January
28, 1910. He was interred in Hopedale,
Massachusetts, where he maintained a summer house.
The K Street houses were all converted into
office space in the 1920s, and were razed in 1952 for the construction of the
present day office building; itself being renovated several times from its original facade (right).
Copyright Paul K. Williams
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