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The Watson-Curtze Mansion presents an example of the upper class lifestyle of the 1890s in Erie. This was a time when Erie was nearing the peak of its industrial development. The businessmen and industrialists who took advantage of this era to accumulate their fortunes enjoyed the privileges of an elegant lifestyle.

 

The Mansion is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Located at 356 West Sixth Street, on "Millionaires' Row"of the West Sixth Street Historic District, it provides an opportunity to view the architecture and craftsmanship of stained glass windows, friezes, stone, marble work and woodwork that went into building this example of Richardsonian Romanesque architecture.
Two families occupied the Mansion before it became a museum. The H. F. Watson family--Harrison F. Watson, his wife Carrie Tracy Watson, and their daughter Winifred, moved into the house in 1891.
Harrison Watson was president of the H. F. Watson Paper Company, which manufactured building, roofing, and lining papers and materials, as well as steam pipe and boiler packaging and coverings.
In 1923, Winifred and her husband Ely Griswold sold the house to Frederick Felix Curtze. Mr. Curtze was president of the Erie Trust Company, Heisler Locomotive Works, Union Iron Works and the Keystone Fish Company.
The Curtzes lived in the house until Mr. Curtze died, in 1941. After Mr. Curtze died, his wife Caroline, son Frederick A. Curtze and his wife Myrtle and daughter Louise Curtze Wilkins gave the Mansion to the School District of the City of Erie to be used as a museum.The Museum Department of the Erie Public Library moved into the Mansion, which became the Erie Public Museum, and later the Erie Historical Museum. On January 1, 2000, the Museum merged with the Erie County Historical Society to become the Erie County Historical Society.
History of the
Watson-Curtze Mansion

The architectural style of the house is known as Richardsonian Romanesque, named after the famous architect Henry Hobson Richardson. The firm of Green and Wicks, Buffalo, New York designed the house in 1889.

The style is characterized by the use of massive geometric shapes, straightforward treatment of stone and broad roof planes. The overall effect depends on mass volume and scale, rather than decorative detailing.

The mansion has 24 rooms, 17 closets, 5 bathrooms and 12 fireplaces. Most of the rooms are very different in design and style. Upon close inspection many unusual building materials and features can be found. There are mosaics (inlaid patterns made of bits of stone, glass or other material), friezes (hand-painted oil paintings on canvas that are attached to the upper portion of a wall) and stained glass windows.

Heavily applied decorative woodwork appears throughout the house. Hardwood oak floors are found in all the rooms. Even the decorative hinges, door knobs and drawer pulls indicate the high level of detail incorporated in the building of the mansion.
The best information we have concerning how the house was furnished comes from a 1918 appraisal done by the Fidelity Appraisal Company for Mrs. Carrie Tracy Watson. This inventory counted and appraised everything from the basement to the attic. It listed every piece of furniture in the house and even counted the napkins in the linen closet.

The only photographs in the ECHS collection that show how the interior was furnished are of Winifred Watson's bedroom.

 

ECHS 417 State Street Erie Pa. !6501 *814) 454-1813
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