Monticello

Monticello
/mon'ti chel"oh, -sel"oh/, n.
the estate and residence of Thomas Jefferson, in central Virginia, near Charlottesville.

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Home of Thomas Jefferson, located southeast of Charlottesville, Va.

Designed by Jefferson and constructed 1768–1809, it is one of the finest examples of the early Classical Revival style in the U.S. Jefferson took the floor plan of the house from an English pattern book; the facade was influenced by the work of Andrea Palladio. The final structure is a three-story brick-and-frame building with 35 differently shaped rooms. An octagonal dome dominates the structure; below it, a balustrade runs around the roof's edge.

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      city, seat (1895) of San Juan county, southeastern Utah, U.S. Founded in 1886 as a point of entry into the nearby Abajo Mountains and named after the Virginia estate of U.S. President Thomas Jefferson, the town grew as a centre for several ranches that hosted a thriving livestock industry. A vanadium-processing (vanadium) plant was built during World War II and converted to uranium production from 1949 until 1960; the former plant was the subject of an intensive federal hazardous-waste cleanup campaign throughout the 1990s. The city now serves as a tourist centre for nearby Canyonlands National Park. Inc. 1910. Pop. (1990) 1,806; (2000) 1,958.

 the home of Thomas Jefferson (Jefferson, Thomas), located in south-central Virginia, U.S., about 2 miles (3 km) southeast of Charlottesville. Constructed between 1768 and 1809, it is one of the finest examples of the early Classical Revival style in the United States. Monticello was designated a World Heritage site by UNESCO in 1987.

      Unlike most great mansions of the period, which were built in lowlands and adjacent to rivers, Monticello is set atop an 867-foot (264-metre) mountain; the name means “Little Mountain” in Italian. The leveling of the mountaintop was begun in 1768, and Jefferson (Jefferson, Thomas) began designing the house in the same year. He took the floor plan of the house from an English pattern book, while the facade was influenced by the designs of the 16th-century Italian architect Andrea Palladio (Palladio, Andrea). Construction began in 1769 or 1770 and continued, with interruptions, for more than a decade. The original house consisted of a central two-story portico with a wing on either side. The kitchen, laundry, servants' quarters, and other separate service buildings were concealed beneath two long L-shaped terraces, extending from each side of the house along the slope of the mountain; the terraces were connected to the basement of the main house by an underground passage. This structure was retained through the house's subsequent alterations.

      Monticello was largely finished when Jefferson left for France in 1784. During his five years there his ideas about architecture changed dramatically, as he was influenced by the work of contemporary Neoclassical architects and by ancient Roman buildings.

  Jefferson began drawing up plans for altering and enlarging Monticello in 1793, and work began in 1796. Much of the original house was torn down. The final structure, completed in 1809, is a three-story brick and frame building with 35 rooms, 12 of them in the basement; each room is a different shape. There are two main entrances: the east portico, which provides access to the public portions of the house; and the west portico, the private entrance, which opens on the estate's extensive gardens. The windows on the second story start at floor level and are joined with the first-story windows in a single frame, which gives the impression that there is only a single story. A central octagonal dome dominates the structure; below it, a continuous balustrade runs around the edge of the roof. Eighteenth-century French one-story pavilions such as the Hôtel de Salm were the inspiration for this plan; the dome was the first in the United States.

      Jefferson filled the house with ingenious devices. A dial on the ceiling of the east portico supplies a reading from a weather vane on the roof; above the east entrance is a large clock with two faces, visible from the inside and outside. The fireplace in the dining room conceals a dumbwaiter that communicates with the wine cellar. Jefferson's arrangements for lighting and ventilation were equally inventive, and he designed many of the pieces of furniture himself.

      Upon Jefferson's death in 1826, his daughter Martha inherited Monticello, but she was unable to maintain it. She sold the property to U.S. Navy officer Uriah Levy in 1836, who in turn bequeathed it to the people of the United States. His heirs, however, contested the will, and Monticello remained in possession of the Levy family until 1923, when it was purchased by the Thomas Jefferson Memorial Foundation.

      The foundation restored the house and grounds and brought back many of the original furnishings. The estate of Monticello now includes Jefferson's home and interior furnishings, orchard, vineyard, vegetable garden, and plantation. It functions as a museum and a major tourist attraction.

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Universalium. 2010.

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