A New York merchant, Richard Conner
Crocheron, built a magnificant mansion
on this spot. The adjacent photograph
captured the decayed splendor of this
home before it burned. Look closely
at the photograph. Try to identify the
columns that survived the fire.
Mr:. Crocheron arrived in town about
1837 to help run a family business. He
traveled North for his Philadelphia bride
in 1843 after building this brick home.
The front porch had a grand view of two
rivers. The back wall adjoined a brick
store that his uncles had built twenty
years earlier.
The Crocherons also invested in a line of
ocean-going steamships. So Richard's
family was able to escape the Southern
heat by returning North each summer to
"take the waters" at Saratoga, New York.
When his wife died in 1850, Richard
was heart-broken. He sold his Cahawba
property, freed his slaves, and returned to
New York with his three little children.
In the Midst of War, Opposing Generals Share a Bountiful Dinner
During the Civil War, shortly after the Battle of Selma, Union General James Harrison Wilson traveled to Cahawba under a flag of truce to discuss a prisoner exchange with his opponent Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest. Thomas W. Matthews lived in the Crocheron mansion at the
time, and he offered his home to the generals. Matthews, although a slaveholder and a rich planter, had never given up his allegiance to the Union.
On April 8th, 1865, Wilson arrived at 11 am. Forrest appeared at 1 pm. The two generals shared a "bountiful Southern dinner" with their host, then they withdrew to the parlor for a long but guarded conversation. After sizing up one another, the two congenial dinner companions parted ways. They rode away from Cahawba ready to resume the bloody war that pitted them against one another. The following day, General Robert E. Lee surrendered at Appomattox.
"Penciling"
If you are a persistent explorer you will find some authentic "penciling" on one of the columns. In the 19th century, brick masons would often paint a thick white line over
their mortar joints to make handmade bricks look more uniform. This is a clue that machine made bricks were not yet available in Cahawba.
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