Church House (Columbia, Tennessee)


Church House, also known as the Barrow House, is a historic mansion in Columbia, Tennessee. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.
Nominated for the National Register on 10/19/78, The Barrow House, which was built in ca. 1873, is one of the best examples the Second
Empire style of architecture in Columbia and one of the grandest late-nineteenth-century
houses in the city. Its decidedly three-dimensional massing, profuse ornamentation, and
the combination of attached and semi-detached dependencies are distinctive. The facade
porch, with its effusive decorative elements, and the bay windows in the east and south
elevations emphasize the horizontal lines of the building and in part balance the predominant verticality
of the tower and mansard roof.
Three blocks west of the court square, the Barrow House is located in a formerly
prestigious neighborhood, an area which still contains a number of large late-nineteenthcentury houses.
The wealthy and prominent of Columbia reside here.
Although the rear of the building has been modified somewhat to add a kitchen,
the facade retains its original appearance. The current owner has gone through extensive
renovations.
Block-like in its staggered form and irregular plan, and
highlighted with massive detailing, this impressive brick house epitomizes the Second
Empire style of architecture at its most imposing best.
Three stories tall and three bays wide, and resting on a cut and coursed
stone foundation, the house is topped with a characteristic Second Empire mansard
roof which is covered with decorative slate shingles. Except for the facade, which was laid in stretcher bond, the walls were laid in common bond.
The center bay of the facade projects forward and has a tower, another design element
typical of the Second Empire style. A heavily ornamented round arch defines the
entrance to the enclosed porch at the base of the tower section. The east and west
bays are set back one more than the other; the former has a covered one-story porch with carved posts, spandrels,
and balustrade while the later has bay windows with round-head, one-over-one windows.
This type of window is found throughout, and those in the second story of the facade
have heavy hoods and in the center bay an ornate sill. In the story above the
second are round and round-arched windows in dormers with unusually decorative lintels.
Chimneys with flared tops above the east and west walls frame the mansard roof; a third
chimney rises above the north wall. The cornice has bracket-like elements, and this
design appears above the facade bay window and porch.
The two-sectioned east elevation has a bay window unit which duplicates the one in the
facade; this element is located in the projecting rear bay. A single story brick kitchen, with a hip roof, is attached to the eastern section of the north
wall by a covered porch, and a small, one-story, frame wing projects from the northern
end of the west elevation. The kitchen appears to have been built in the nineteenth
century, but the frame wing is probably a fairly recent addition. Another section of
the covered porch near the northwest corner connects a second, one-story brick. building
with a hip roof to the house; quite possibly, this was originally a completely detached
outbuilding; for many years it was used as servant's quarters. Northwest of the house
is a parking area for the homeowners and guests.

History

Maury County Sheriff Latta. reputedly built the Barrow House. Robert Church, a banker and land
speculator purchased it in ca. 1885. Including Robert and his descendants, the Church House
was a family home for about 100 years. It was designed in the Second Empire architectural style.
The house was purchased by Robert Church, a banker, in 1885. It was later inherited by his grandson, Robert Church Barrow.

Architectural significance

Information collected by Matt Locke, current owner of the Church Barrow House. According to The Columbia Daily Herald printed on November 7, 1873 'Mr. Williamson of Nashville', was the architect of Sheriff Latta's new home.