Idlewild Farm Complex

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Location617 Williamson Rd., Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania
Coordinates40°2′9″N 75°17′36″W / 40.03583°N 75.29333°W / 40.03583; -75.29333
Area26 acres (11 ha)
Built1740, although original building was built in 1699.
Idlewild Farm Complex
Idlewild Farm Complex is located in Pennsylvania
Idlewild Farm Complex
Idlewild Farm Complex is located in the United States
Idlewild Farm Complex
Location617 Williamson Rd., Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania
Coordinates40°2′9″N 75°17′36″W / 40.03583°N 75.29333°W / 40.03583; -75.29333
Area26 acres (11 ha)
Built1740, although original building was built in 1699.
Architectural styleGeorgian
NRHP reference No.84003505[1]
Added to NRHPJanuary 20, 1984

The Idlewild Farm Complex is a 26-acre (11 ha) plot of land in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania. It was originally part of the Welsh Tract and is now a portion of the Bridlewild Trails Association.[2]

In 1698, Welsh farmer Robert Lloyd was deeded 400 acres (160 ha) of land near "the road leading through the Black Rocks" now known as Black Rock Road. In 1700, Lloyd built a one room with loft house on the property, complete with beehive oven and walk-in fireplace for help with cooking. Over the next 14 years, Lloyd had eight kids and tended to the farm. However, in 1714, Robert Lloyd died.

Lloyd's wife, Lowry Lloyd, soon remarried. Her new husband added a new portion to the house in 1717 and a wooden barn was built.

Along with the change of ownership, the barn was rebuilt to stone in 1825, the two portions of the farmhouse were connected in 1825, and a wagon house was added (1827).

Co‑founder of the Lower Merion Historical Society, Douglas Macfarlan, marked “Williamson Hs. 1704” on one of his hand‑drawn maps at the Idlewild location — a clear acknowledgment of the Williamson family’s early presence in the area. What is documented with certainty is this:

  • John Williamson (1789–1862) began his ownership of Idlewild in 1834. He added a springhouse (1860) at the base of the hill, used both as a cool place to store food and a water source. Upon his death in 1862, the farm was partitioned between his two sons, Garret and Samuel Williamson (1827–1911). Garret sold his share back to Samuel, who over the next few years added a carriage house, milkhouse, bull pen, and horse stable.
  • Due to severe Civil War injuries, Samuel was eventually forced to give up active farming. 1897 — that is when Frances Baugh Saunders purchased 87 of Samuel G. Williamson’s remaining 104 acres of Idlewild.
  • Yet, Samuel remained on Idlewild land and built a stately home by Mill Creek, called “Sunnyside,” located on Williamson Road, on acreage that had originally been part of Idlewild Farm. Both Idlewild and Sunnyside stand on what is now Williamson Road, named for the family who owned the land for more than a century.

Saunders Times

References

Further reading

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