Though the Triad contains the lion’s share of North Carolina’s sprawling estates built by early twentieth-century textile fortunes, few can match the size, quality, and design of Adamsleigh. The vast estate, located 
in Greensboro’s Sedgefield neighborhood, consists of a sprawling 15,000 square foot manor house coupled with tennis courts, a caretakers cottage, a pond, two swimming pools and other outbuildings. Today, the manor house and its surrounding gardens are for sale and their future remains in question.
Adamsleigh was built for John Hampton “Hamp” Adams and his wife Elizabeth. Hamp Adams was a native of Adamsville, South Carolina and co-founder of Adams-Millis Corporation, the first company in High Point to be listed on the New York Stock Exchange. The family occupied a grand Italianate villa on North Main Street 
(now occupied by the Adams Inn) before commissioning their Sedgefield House. Plans were drawn up in 1929, and finalized for construction the week of the October 29th “Black Tuesday” stock market crash. Upon completion, the family relocating from High Point to their Sedgefield estate they named “Adamsleigh” in 1931.
Adamsleigh was deigned by Luther Lashmit, a talented architect in the offices of Winston-Salem firm Northup-O’Brien. Lashmit was trained at Pittsburgh’s Carnegie Tech and demonstrated skill in designing European-inspired homes for high-income clients. In High Point, he designed a Norman Revival mansion for hosiery baron Willis Slane and a Cotswold Tudor manor for hosiery manufacturer Comer Covington. In Winston-Salem, Lashmit’s best-known work is Graylyn, home of RJR president Bowman Gray. Adamsleigh is the only known work of Lashmit in Greensboro.

For Elizabeth and Hamp Adams, Lashmit chose an eclectic Renaissance-inspired English Tudor style architectural theme. The long L-shaped floor plan is embellished with a covered porte-cochere for arriving guests, a cylindrical stair tower topped by a conical roof, a classically-inspired entry-way to a flagstone terrace and lawn, and a stunning array of hand-forged wrought iron that graces windows, doors and a weathervane. Though the asymmetrical form of the house, wall-dormers, and random-patterned brickwork work to suggest medieval Tudor architecture, the use of rounded arches and classical limestone trim incorporate details commonly associated with the Renaissance period.

Interior appointments are equally eclectic, including intricate plaster-molded ceilings, Renaissance era mantles, and Art Deco suites for Adams’s two daughters that are evocative of a Hollywood movie set. The commodious floor plan includes a grand living room, library, sitting room, office, dining room, a suite of kitchens, guest suites, a master suite with sitting room, and a dormitory wing for a small army of staff. Evidence of 1930s-era technological advancements such as intercom, elevator, drinking fountains, and vacuum system confirm long-time resident Allen Watkin's observation that his father-in-law “expected only the best” at both home and work.
After Hamp Adams died in 1935, his daughter Elizabeth and her husband Allen Watkins called Adamsleigh home for decades. Watkins survived his wife and passed away in 2003. The estate has been little changed since the 1930s, and a majority of decorative treatments, finishes, and fixtures remain from the original 
period of construction. The house had little wear and was exceptionally well-built, illustrated by the relative scarcity of water damage and deterioration.
The Adamsleigh estate is available for restoration through Lynn Black of Yost and Little. The restoration of this property may be eligible for income tax credits if designated through the National Register or property tax deferrals if landmarked through the Guilford Historic Preservation Commission. Hopefully one of Greensboro's grandest mansions will see grander days soon.
Very intriguing classical Manor
Posted by: Luxury Bed | November 26, 2008 at 12:37 PM
I think this is not just a house, it is a mansion.
Deirdre G
Posted by: real estate in Philippines | December 14, 2009 at 02:27 AM