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Feature
From Hearth To Heritage
Patricia Eakins
10/01/2005

When George Lewis and his wife, Clifton, commissioned  Frank Lloyd Wright to design their home in Tallahassee, Fla., in the early 1950s, they raised more than a few eyebrows among their neighbors, most of whom resided behind the white columns of antebellum-style mansions. But the Lewises were always a bit ahead of their time. A board member of one of the preservation institutes Clifton supports recently told the Tallahassee Democrat that she is a woman who dares to dream the important dream.

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A home’s architectural pedigree and the accomplishments of its inhabitants may elevate a residence to a legacy worthy of preservation. But families who embrace the notion that transforming a home into a public legacy is easy may be unpleasantly surprised. Negotiations with the community and financial sponsors can be long and complex. A significant endowment must be established for long-term upkeep. The owner must also convince heirs, or find a sponsoring institution or government agency, to oversee the home and the endowment in perpetuity.
 Photography by Sue Root Baker
Her husband died in 1996, and today Clifton dreams of immortalizing Spring House, named after the freshwater font that first drew her to the property. The structure is one of Wright’s later works—and the only residence he designed in Florida—a so-called hemicycle or two-story structure characterized by concentric and intersecting circles. Spring House is already listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The Lewis family and Spring House together appear to possess the important qualities that comprise a home that can become a public legacy: a dwelling with an architectural pedigree owned by a resident of local prominence.

But the process of transforming Spring House from a personal home to a public heritage has been, so far, rather quixotic. The Lewis family has faced many of the exasperating challenges common to those seeking to establish their home as a legacy to the community. Safeguarding a beloved or even historically significant residence for posterity often requires exhaustive planning, more patience than Job, delicate diplomatic skills and a large endowment. But, if done wisely, a legacy home can become an architectural showpiece or an inspiring meeting place that serves untold numbers in future generations.

George Lewis’s great-grandfather, Benjamin Cheever Lewis, rode to Florida from Lynn, Mass., on a mule and founded Lewis State Bank in 1856. The institution remained in the family until the 1970s. Despite his conservative profession, George’s penchant for activism made him “a black sheep in the family and community,” his son Van recalls with pride. Clifton, scion of a deeply rooted Tallahassee family, remains an iconoclastic crusader for progressive causes, often attending meetings clad in a bonnet and a black or white caftan made by her daughter, Byrd Lewis Mashburn.
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