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Idlewild enhances the area
Idlewild, an American Gothic Revival mansion, offers historical color to the Fredericksburg area.

Date published: 11/21/2001

The American Gothic Revival mansion, Idlewild, was nestled in Spotsylvania County for decades until Fredericksburg annexed the land on which it stood in 1984.

Idlewild, a beautiful, architecturally important mansion, is located behind the Home Depot site. It is caught in the tangle of highways and commercial ventures off State Route 3, yet seems to be miles away from such distractions.

The house and its outbuildings, four of which were built at the same time as the main structure and are still standing, are hidden away behind a screen of trees. This same stand of trees screens the commercial development surrounding the property from the mansion.

Idlewild is a brick structure built in 1858-59 by William Yates Downman for his family. Downman and his wife, Mary Ann Hayes Downman, settled into the mansion assuming that they would there lead a quiet, peaceful existence, raising their children and running their farm.

This was not meant to be. The Civil War found its way to their door on more than one occasion, and they found it necessary to flee their home, not knowing what they would find upon their return.

Idlewild served as the center of several minor skirmishes during the Civil War, and Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee used the mansion as his headquarters one night in May 1863. The property was the burial ground for two Union soldiers until they were removed and reburied in the National Cemetery in Fredericksburg.

Downman did not live to see the end of the war. He was always in frail health and died in December 1864 of typhoid at Idlewild. He is buried at the family estate of Belle Isle in Lancaster County.

The Downmans had six children. Ann Hayes Downman was their firstborn and grew up to marry R. Innes Taylor of Fall Hill. Their second child was Sophia Chinn Downman, who married Marion Dimmock, a prominent architect of Richmond.

Their third child, Joseph Henry Downman, named after William's father who had himself died at a very early age, died just a few days after his birth and is buried in the churchyard of St. George's Episcopal Church in Fredericksburg.


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Date published: 11/21/2001



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