Gibraltar | |
Location | 2505 Pennsylvania Ave., Wilmington, Delaware |
---|---|
Coordinates | 39°45′41″N 75°34′30″W / 39.761389°N 75.575000°W |
Area | 6.1 acres (2.5 ha) |
Built | c. 1844, 1916[2] |
Architect | Ives, Albert Ely; DeArmond, Ashmead and Bickley, et al. |
Architectural style | Colonial Revival, Italianate |
NRHP reference No. | 98001098[1] |
Added to NRHP | September 14, 1998 |
Gibraltar (previously known as the Hugh Rodney Sharp Mansion), located at 2505 Pennsylvania Avenue in Wilmington, Delaware, is a country estate home dating from c. 1844 that is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It takes its name from the Rock of Gibraltar, alluding to the high rocky outcrop on which the house was built. It is located just inside Wilmington's city limits and originally stood at the center of a much larger estate which has over time been reduced to the present area of about a city block in size. The house was originally built by John Rodney Brincklé and inherited by his brother's wife and children, before being bought in 1909 by Hugh Rodney Sharp, who was linked to the Du Pont family through marriage and work. Sharp expanded and remodeled the house, as well as commissioning the pioneering female landscape designer Marian Cruger Coffin to lay out the gardens.[2]
The gardens are now owned by a local preservation trust which acquired it in the 1990s after it was threatened with demolition and redevelopment. They have since been restored and opened to the public. The estate was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1998 in recognition of its importance as a well-preserved example of the Country Place era of art and design.[2] The mansion, currently owned by a local developer, has not been occupied for many years and its condition has significantly deteriorated.
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