786 Church Road
Wayne, PA, USA

  • Architectural Style: Colonial
  • Bathroom: N/A
  • Year Built: 1913
  • National Register of Historic Places: N/A
  • Square Feet: N/A
  • National Register of Historic Places Date: N/A
  • Neighborhood: N/A
  • National Register of Historic Places Area of Significance: N/A
  • Bedrooms: N/A
  • Architectural Style: Colonial
  • Year Built: 1913
  • Square Feet: N/A
  • Bedrooms: N/A
  • Bathroom: N/A
  • Neighborhood: N/A
  • National Register of Historic Places: N/A
  • National Register of Historic Places Date: N/A
  • National Register of Historic Places Area of Significance: N/A
Neighborhood Resources:

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Apr 05, 2023

  • Charmaine Bantugan

Chanticleer

Built in 1913, for Adolph G. Rosengarten (1870-1946) and his wife, Christine Penrose (1877-1969). Adolph was a grandson of George Rosengarten, founder of Rosengarten & Sons, Chemical Manufacturers, and reputed to be one of the wealthiest men in Philadelphia when he died in 1890. The firm became known as the Powers, Weightman & Rosengarten Co., of which both Adolph and his father, Harry, served as President. In 1927, the firm merged again and is better recognised today as the pharmaceutical giant, Merck & Co. In 1912, Adolph and Christine purchased a 7-acre property at Wayne-St. Davids about a mile-and-a-half off the Main Line of the Pennsylvania Railroad. Adolph commissioned his friend and former classmate, Charles Louis Borie (1870-1943), to design their new summer home, which was completed the following year. Thomas Warren Sears (1880-1956) was the landscape architect who laid out the terraces "as extensions of the house". By 1924, they had enlarged the house and made it their permanent year-round home. The Rosengartens named their home "Chanticleer" (pronounced shon-te-clear) which is old French for "Rooster" but in English is synonymous with two literary classics: the Chanticleer is the proud and fierce rooster that rules the barnyard in "The Nun's Priest's Tale" from Chaucer's 14th Century Canterbury Tales; and, in 1855 it was the name given to the house in William Makepeace Thackeray's "The Newcomes: Memoirs of a Most Respectable Family".

Chanticleer

Built in 1913, for Adolph G. Rosengarten (1870-1946) and his wife, Christine Penrose (1877-1969). Adolph was a grandson of George Rosengarten, founder of Rosengarten & Sons, Chemical Manufacturers, and reputed to be one of the wealthiest men in Philadelphia when he died in 1890. The firm became known as the Powers, Weightman & Rosengarten Co., of which both Adolph and his father, Harry, served as President. In 1927, the firm merged again and is better recognised today as the pharmaceutical giant, Merck & Co. In 1912, Adolph and Christine purchased a 7-acre property at Wayne-St. Davids about a mile-and-a-half off the Main Line of the Pennsylvania Railroad. Adolph commissioned his friend and former classmate, Charles Louis Borie (1870-1943), to design their new summer home, which was completed the following year. Thomas Warren Sears (1880-1956) was the landscape architect who laid out the terraces "as extensions of the house". By 1924, they had enlarged the house and made it their permanent year-round home. The Rosengartens named their home "Chanticleer" (pronounced shon-te-clear) which is old French for "Rooster" but in English is synonymous with two literary classics: the Chanticleer is the proud and fierce rooster that rules the barnyard in "The Nun's Priest's Tale" from Chaucer's 14th Century Canterbury Tales; and, in 1855 it was the name given to the house in William Makepeace Thackeray's "The Newcomes: Memoirs of a Most Respectable Family".

1913

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