Access is granted in accordance with the
Protocols for the University Archives and Records Center.
PROVENANCE
Donated by Eleanor Houston Smith in June 1984 (accession 1987:33).
ARRANGEMENT
Organized in six
series: I. General Real Estate Files, 1834-1964; II. Title Papers Relating to
Coded Properties, 1768-1953; III. Records Relating to Uncoded Properties, 1867-1961;
IV. Maps and Architectural Drawings, 1882-1967; V. Real Estate Holdings of Sallie
Sherrerd Houston, 1902-1942; VI. Real Estate Holdings of Samuel Frederick Houston,
1834-1952; VII. Reference and Research, 1971-1989. All series are arranged alphabetically.
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH
Henry Howard Houston was born
in 1820 in Wrightsville, Pennsylvania, son of Samuel Nelson Houston and Susan
Strickler. He left school at fourteen began his working life in the mercantile
industry. In 1840 he was employed at an iron forge owned by James Buchanan (later
U.S. President), the Lucinda Furnace in Clarion County, Pennsylvania. Having traveled
for a few years, Houston learned to appreciate the value in the transportation
industries; he began working for a canal and railway transportation company in
1847 in Philadelphia. By 1850 he had joined with the Pennsylvania Railroad as
an agent in their freight department. He quickly rose in the ranks to become general
freight agent for the entire railroad in 1852. Houston worked hard to expand and
improve the operations of the railroad and succeeded in bringing it large profits
during the massive movement of people and materials during the Civil War when
the vice-president of the railroad, Thomas A. Scott, became Assistant Secretary
of War. During these same years, his own fortune ascended to those of the very
prosperous.
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Houston left the Pennsylvania Railroad in 1867 to start a number
of transportation companies. Almost all of these companies, however, had direct,
and often favorable, business connections the Pennsylvania Railroad. Among the
most notable companies were the Union Freight Line (later absorbed by the Empire
Transportation Company) and the International Navigation Company, which created
the Red Star Line. In addition to these companies, Houston invested in large number
of railroads and related industries, such as iron and steel works, during this
period. His close association with the Pennsylvania Railroad eventually earned
him a position on its board of directors in 1881, a post which he held until his
death. Houston's financial interests were not limited to railroads. He also invested
in California and Nevada gold mines and, more significantly for his estate and
heirs, the fledging petroleum industry.
Houston lived most of his adult
life on Tulpehocken Street in the Germantown section of Philadelphia. In 1886,
at the age of 66, he built a mansion "Drum Moir" in the adjacent Philadelphia
community of Chestnut Hill. His interests in this area of the city were turned
into an investment opportunity when the Pennsylvania Railroad decided to build
a commuter line from center city Philadelphia to Chestnut Hill in the early 1880s.
The subsidiary corporation - the Philadelphia, Germantown and Chestnut Hill Railroad
- which formed to complete this work was headed by Houston. For some years prior
to this, he had been purchasing land in the western parts of Chestnut Hill and
Mount Airy and some small tracts in Germantown. By the time the Chestnut Hill
railroad was completed and operational, Houston was the largest single landowner
in this section of the city. He immediately began to develop his holdings by opening
streets, building a resort hotel (now the campus of Chestnut Hill Academy), a
country club, an Episcopal church, and several dozen rental houses. Houston's
real estate investment and development plans were not limited to these communities.
He also acquired large holdings in the upper section of Roxborough and adjacent
Springfield and Whitemarsh Townships in Montgomery County. These areas were going
to be located at the end of another branch of the Pennsylvania Railroad which
was never built.
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Henry Howard Houston stated in his will that he gave largely
from his "income during [his] life to educational, religious, and charitable
institutions and to private objects of charity" and practiced a method of
philanthropy in which he gave at least one-tenth of his income to charity. In
addition to donating funds, Houston was directly involved in a number of charitable
and educational institutions. He served on the board of the directors of the Pennsylvania
School for Deaf and was probably instrumental influencing the school's relocation
from center of Philadelphia to suburban Mount Airy in the early 1890s. Houston
was also an active member of the Protestant Episcopal Church, serving on the vestry
and as rector's warden at two churches in Germantown, one of which he donated
to the Diocese of Pennsylvania, being a lay delegate for the diocesan conventions,
and supporting the Diocese of Maine, where he had a vacation home. His most notable
service, however, was that on the board of trustees of the University of Pennsylvania.
He was elected to the board in 1885 and held this position until his death. Both
of his sons, Henry Howard, Jr., and Samuel Frederic, attended the University.
Responding to an appeal from University Provost Charles Custis Harrsion, Houston
decided to fund the construction a student union on the University campus. The
building was dedicated to his son Henry, who died shortly after graduation in
1879. Houston Hall became America's first college student union. The family continued
to support this building.
Henry Howard Houston died in June 1895 and was
survived by his wife Salle Sherrerd (Bonnell), and three children, Sallie Bonnell
Houston Henry, Samuel Frederic Houston, and Gertrude Houston Woodward.
After Houston's death, the management of his real estate empire was turned over
to the executors of his will. His son, Samuel
Frederic Houston, and friend, Edgar Dudley Faries, were the main agents. They
continued to rent houses in Chestnut Hill and Germantown into the 1930s and 1940s.
Between 1895 and about 1925, the estate also sold off the choicest lots in Chestnut
Hill to wealthy Philadelphians, who built new homes on them. These sales helped
to create and maintain the status of Chestnut Hill as a leading neighborhood for
the Philadelphia elite at the beginning of the twentieth century.
In addition to the Chestnut Hill activities, Samuel Frederic Houston was
very interesting in developing the estate's holdings in Philadelphia's upper Roxborough
and adjacent Montgomery County. The estate actively worked to acquire land in
upper Roxborough and Springfield Township to fill out its existing holdings. Samuel's
original plans were to make this area an extension of the Chestnut Hill by building
a bridge over the Wissahickon gorge, which divided the two communities, and by
constructing a road which would connect Roxborough with the Main Line and Chestnut
Hill. This idea first appeared in public 1910. In the 1920s the estate hired Philadelphia
architect and University of Pennsylvania professor, Paul Philippe Cret, to prepare
a traffic study on the best route for the new road. At the same time, Samuel tried
unsuccessfully to interest the City to hold its Sesquicentennial fair on the estate's
Roxborough land. In 1927, however, he did succeed in persuading the Episcopal
Diocese of Pennsylvania to accept a tract of land for the site of new grand cathedral.
In spite of Samuel's donation of the mortuary chapel, the Diocese was unable to
raise enough funds and interest in the building to complete more than the choir
and chapel.
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When Samuel was unsuccessful in getting the necessary support
of both the Philadelphia and Montgomery County officials for a development plan
based upon on a cross-county road, he scaled back the design to include only a
bridge between Chestnut Hill and Roxborough. He hired Robert Rodes McGoodwin in
the 1930s to design several modest middle class houses which were to set the tone
of the development in Roxborough. Just after World War II, Houston hired the firm
of Saarinen, Saarinen, and Associates to put together a full scale development
plan for the area. Saarinen's city planners produced a brochure detailing recommended
mixed use development and a bridge over the Wissahickon. Houston tried to interest
a number of institutions to locate at this site, the most notable being the United
Nations, Temple University, and the Veteran's Administration Hospital. These plans
became too ambitious for Samuel to undertake as he reached his 80s and in the
end he chose to follow a very modest design for typical post World War II ranch-style
housing development surrounding a shopping center. This new community, which was
largely the design work of Walter K. Durham, is known today as Andorra.
The death of Samuel Frederic Houston in 1952 ended the active real estate development
of the Henry Howard Houston estate. The estate continued its legal existence until
the death in 1961 of Henry Howard's last surviving child, Gertrude Houston Woodward.
Upon her death the assets of the estate were divided among the surviving heirs.
Most of the unsold land fell to Samuel Frederic's daughter, Eleanor Houston Smith,
who took an active role in preserving much of the land for open space.
SCOPE AND CONTENT
The Henry Howard
Houston Estate Papers document the creation and development of a large real estate
investment in late nineteenth and early twentieth century Philadelphia and Montgomery
Counties. The collection also provides extension information on land ownership
in this area from the late eighteenth to mid nineteenth century through the original
deeds, which form the title papers series of the collection.
The General
Real Estate Files series contains correspondence and working files relating to
real estate management and development for the Henry Howard Houston Estate primarily
from 1920 to 1950. The series includes correspondence, proposals and a few architects'
plans for the development of the Estate's land holdings in the Germantown, Chestnut
Hill and Roxborough sections of Philadelphia County and in Springfield and Whitemarsh
townships of adjoining Montgomery County. The Eliel and Eero Saarinen correspondence
is the most extensive. The series also includes financial and personnel records,
title papers to properties purchased by the Estate's Joint Account (arranged by
grantor), property appraisals, an analysis of property improvements and tax lists.
Most notable among these records are a comprehensive ledger of rents and repairs
(1884-1901); a printed copy of the will of H.H. Houston (1895); a printed copy
of the executor's accounting of the estate for the period 1895-1901; comprehensive
appraisals of the Estate's real estate holdings as of 1913 and 1940 and an "improvement
analysis" for the period 1913-1940; and, a circa 1950 promotional brochure
by Saarinen, Saarinen and Associates of the Estate's proposed development plans.
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The Coded Property series is the heart of the Houston
Estate Papers. Houston's extensive accumulation of Philadelphia real estate is
documented purchase by purchase; taken as a group, these property files track
Houston's decision making over a thirty year period. Many files contain the original
parchment deeds to a given property, in many cases extending back as far as the
eighteenth century; this should be of considerable interest to local historians.
The bulk of the materials, however, reflect Houston's own activity and date from
1865 through 1895.
Deeds, mortgages, correspondence, tax receipts, title
searches, briefs of title, maps and property plans; registers of grantors and
properties can be found in this series. Summary accounts of all properties are
found in the two volume "Deed Record Book." Individual files are arranged
by an alphanumeric coding system keyed
to an index map prepared by the Estate in 1906. The index
map includes all Mount Airy, Chestnut Hill and Roxborough properties owned
by the estate in 1906. Copies of the index map, reduced and mounted on ten separate
boards, are contained in this series. The index map does not include properties
sold before 1906, acquired after 1906 and/or located in areas other than the three
described above. A register, along with a grantor index, listing all the coded
properties is located at the beginning of the series. The coded property series
also includes approximately 120 individual property plans found in their respective
property folders.
The Records Relating to Uncoded Properties series contains
documentation relating to properties which do not fall within the coding system
established by the managers of Henry Howard Houston's real estate holdings. These
records are arranged in three subseries: properties west of the Wissahickon Creek,
most of which are located in the Andorra section of upper Roxborough; properties
east of the Wissahickon, including Germantown, Mt. Airy and Chestnut Hill; and
properties outside of Philadelphia. The documents include deeds and other title
papers, tax bills and assessments for municipal improvements, a brief renter index
for the Andorra development and a few property development plans.

The Maps and Architectural Drawings series consists of maps, site surveys, plans
and architectural drawings arranged according to a geographic-numeric index map
used by the estate for Philadelphia county properties. A copy of the index
map is attached to this inventory. The index designates fifteen geographic
areas in Philadelphia and Montgomery counties and one miscellaneous category.
All maps and drawings in the Houston Estate Papers collection correspond to a
location in this index.
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The maps, architectural drawings and related textual materials
generally reflect twentieth century development of Houston properties in the Germantown,
Mount Airy, Chestnut Hill and Roxborough sections of Philadelphia. This series
complements and often is directly related the documentation found in the first
three series.
The Real Estate Holdings of Sallie Sherrerd (Bonnell) Houston
series and the Real Estate Holdings of Samuel Frederic Houston series document
the purchase, management, and development of properties which were acquired to
fill out the estate's holdings in the Roxborough section of Philadelphia County
and across the county line into Springfield and Whitemarsh townships of Montgomery
County. The contents are primarily title papers and real estate tax and assessment
receipts. Tax and assessment receipts are arranged chronologically and the title
papers are arranged by last name of grantor.
The Research Materials series
contains research and reports relating to the Houston estate and family. Its contents
are papers and copies of published and manuscript works created by those who have
studied the Houston family and the Estate of Henry Howard Houston at various times
in the mid and late twentieth century. It includes the notes of those who had
access to the collection and sought to organize it prior to its gift to the University
of Pennsylvania Archives. In addition to this is a copy of the inventory of the
Henry Howard Houston Estate collection at the Pennsylvania State Archives. Copies
of research on the life of Henry Howard Houston and on the extended Houston family
and on the Houston family development of Chestnut Hill can be found here. These
materials are assembled here for the convenience of the user of the collection.
Researchers should note that most of the financial and investment records of the
estate from around 1910 to the 1950s are found in the Henry Howard Houston Estate
Papers, Manuscript
Group 154 at the Pennsylvania State Archives. Houston's personal papers are
located at the American Philosophical Society
and a small collection of architectural drawings at the Architectural
Archives of the University of Pennsylvania.
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