Highgate Carriage House is a historic wedding venue located in Fairmont, West Virginia. Your wedding will be a memorable and beautiful experience for everyone if you have your special day at Highgate Carriage House. <3
Photo Credits: Tim Ray Photography
With a Tudor Revival ambiance, breathtaking architecture, and over 100 years of history, Highgate Carriage House is committed to excellence, and endeavors to make your wedding an unforgettable event. Highgate Carriage House offers a variety of indoor and outdoor
space that comfortably accommodates up to 300 guests. Up to 150 inside the Carriage House for a sit down dining reception, and up to 300 in the frame tent on the upper lawn (available seasonally.) The surrounding estate features beautiful iron gates, a fence, and an immense, multi-gabled mansion. The Carriage House features a terra cotta roof, verdigris copper accents, and trademark Tudor Revival style architecture. The gardens, available seasonally, are also used for ceremonies and receptions of up to 300 guests. Highgate Carriage House provides a variety of packages for ceremonies, receptions, bridal showers, and engagement parties of all sizes. Elopements are also welcome. All packages include access to a bridal suite, indoor reception area, indoor lounge/bar area, tables, chairs, wireless internet, lighting, and complimentary parking. Outside vendors are welcome, and a preferred vendor list for caterers is provided upon booking. Covered outdoor package consist of a 40'x100' framed tent with a capacity of 300 guests.
Photo Credits: Meredith Brook Photography
Built by James Edwin Watson—founder of Consolidation Coal Company--in 1910 at the height of a local economic boom, High Gate was named for the magnificent iron gates and fence surrounding the immense, multi-gabled mansion along with its carriage house and gardens. A vestige of a more gracious, elegant era, the estate is an architectural gem in Fairmont, West Virginia. Mr. Watson not only chose the Tudor Revival style for his home, he also chose to build High Gate in his native city, a notable exception to the rule among other coal magnates. Watson’s choice of Gilded Age architect Horace Trumbauer (1869-1938) was significant. In the 1920s, High Gate passed from the Watson family’s ownership to
begin its journey through several owners and lives, ranging from the Sisters of St. Joseph’s Order to the Mansion’s current use as a funeral home. Eventually, the ownership of the Carriage House and Gardens was different than that of the Mansion, and in the latter part of the 1980s, the future looked bleak for the Carriage House and its grounds. Once home to society events such as the Tiffany Cup tennis tournament and host to distinguished visitors such as President Taft in its heyday, the structure of nearly 10,000 square feet, originally with heated stables, actually housed a nursing home a generation after housing the Watson horses and stable hands. Friends of High Gate, a non-profit organization, was formed in 1989 by a group of concerned individuals striving to save the Carriage House and Gardens of High Gate from purchase by a fast food franchise with plans to demolish the structure to make way for a drive-in restaurant. With congressional support, Friends of High Gate were able to fend off the impending purchase of the Carriage House and to secure emergency assistance from the National Trust for Historic Preservation. On December 12, 1990, Friends of High Gate purchased the Carriage House and grounds with funds from public, private, and corporate donations along with financial assistance through a loan from the National Trust.
The first floor was rehabilitated for adaptive reuse and the exterior restored, and in the 1990s High Gate Carriage House became a multi-purpose facility housing regional cultural and historical exhibits, educational classes, workshops for adults and children, in addition to providing a new local venue—and one of the few historic properties available--for community
and soical use. In 2002, the Vandalia Heritage Foundation partnered with Friends of High Gate , to ensure continued preservation and restoration of the Carriage House and Gardens. After acquiring the property from FOHG, Vandalia contributed to its viability by renovating the second floor of the building, currently utilized for office space. Additional enhancements include phased improvements to the grounds and exterior of the structure, including landscaping, benches and other architectural elements; the master plan for the site includes interpretive signage. By making the grounds and portions of the main level available for social events and community endeavors, such as various master gardener activities, weddings, parties, public meetings and art exhibits,
Vandalia continues to “Keep the Gates
Open", preserving a significiant National Historic Landmark in West Virginia’s history, and an important moment in the local history of Fairmont.
Highgate Carriage House's Social Media!
Want to know more about WV Wedding Professionals check out our Social Media down below!
Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/wvweddingweddings/
Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/wvweddingprofessionals/
Comments