Hayes
Library
Another
historic room in the North Carolina Collection Gallery is a replication
of the early nineteenth-century library at Hayes Plantation, which
is located in Edenton, in Chowan County, N.C. Displayed here is
most of the plantation library's original collection of books, as
well as other furnishings and art works provided to the North Carolina
collection by John Gilliam Wood, the present owner of Hayes. The
library contains nearly 1,800 volumes, with imprints dating from
the late 1500s to the 1860s.
Originally the property of James Cathcart Johnston, the plantation
house and its library were built between 1814 and 1817 and were
designed by William Nichols, an English architect who later became
state architect of North Carolina. Architecturally, the library
itself was ahead of its time in the United States, in large part
due to its Neo-Gothic elements, a style not widely used in this
country until the late 1830s. An adherent to the Palladian school
of architecture, Nichols strove for symmetry and balance in form
in his designs. This accounts for the repeated use of the octagon
in this room. Nichols' use of angled bookshelves in the library's
corners established an eight-sided room. At the library's center
sits an eight-sided table that has eight legs that are planed on
eight sides.
James
C. Johnston was one of North Carolina's most prosperous planters.
He inherited his extensive holdings from his influential father,
Samuel Johnston, a native of Scotland who had immigrated to North
Carolina with his family as a small child. Samuel was very well-connected
politically. His uncle was Gabriel Johnston, North Carolina's royal
governor from 1734 to 1752. Later, Samuel served North Carolina
in the General Assembly and as state governor himself from 1787
to 1789. Through Samuel and his great-uncle, James inherited his
fine collection of books, which he enlarged considerably over the
years. In fact, in the decades prior to the Civil War, the collection
at Hayes was among the largest libraries in North Carolina.
James never married.
Consequently, he made his vast holdings the lifelong focus of his
attention, spending most of his time managing and augmenting his
father's estate. By the 1860s, James owned many thousands of acres
worked by hundreds of slaves. At his death in 1865, he bequeathed
Hayes to a trusted business associate, Edward Wood, whose descendant
today remains the owner of the plantation house and its related
properties. |