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Mount Pleasant

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Mount Pleasant
Type Historic house museum / Park grounds
Location Fairmount Park (East)
Coordinates 39.9860,-75.1900
Area Part of East Fairmount Park
Established 1762 (house)
Operated by Philadelphia Museum of Art
Features Georgian mansion, Benedict Arnold connection, period architecture
Hours Limited—check with Philadelphia Museum of Art
Transit SEPTA bus; drive recommended
Website Official Site

Mount Pleasant is a Georgian mansion in East Fairmount Park, considered one of the finest examples of late colonial architecture in America. Built in 1762 for Scottish sea captain John Macpherson, the house is perhaps best known as the property purchased by Benedict Arnold as a wedding gift—though he never lived there due to his treason. John Adams called it "the most elegant seat in Pennsylvania."[1]

Mount Pleasant represents the height of colonial Philadelphia's architectural achievement.

History

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Construction

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Captain John Macpherson built Mount Pleasant in 1762:

  • Scottish privateer captain
  • Made fortune in shipping
  • Built grand country estate
  • Named it "Clunie" (later Mount Pleasant)

Architecture

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The house exemplifies late Georgian style:

  • Palladian influences
  • Symmetrical design
  • Elaborate exterior details
  • High-style colonial craftsmanship

John Adams' Assessment

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John Adams visited in 1775 and wrote:

  • "The most elegant seat in Pennsylvania"
  • Praised the architecture and grounds
  • Documented in his diary
  • Remains the house's most famous endorsement

Benedict Arnold

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Benedict Arnold's connection:

  • 1779: Purchased Mount Pleasant as wedding gift for Peggy Shippen
  • Never actually lived in the house
  • Arnold's treason discovered 1780
  • Property seized by government
  • Arnold fled to British

Later History

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After Arnold:

  • Various private owners
  • City acquired for Fairmount Park
  • Operated as house museum
  • Managed by Philadelphia Museum of Art

Features

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Architecture

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Georgian Colonial masterpiece:

  • Symmetrical five-bay facade
  • Elaborate entrance
  • Palladian window
  • Stucco over stone
  • Exceptional craftsmanship throughout

Exterior Details

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Notable features:

  • Belt courses and quoins
  • Elaborate doorway with pediment
  • Decorative chimneys
  • Period proportions

Interior

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  • Georgian room layouts
  • Period architectural details
  • Some furnished spaces
  • Architectural interpretation focus

Grounds

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Estate setting:

  • Fairmount Park surroundings
  • Historic landscape
  • Outbuildings (restored)

Visiting

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Access

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  • Limited public hours
  • Check Philadelphia Museum of Art for schedule
  • May be open for special events
  • Exterior always viewable from park

Getting There

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Location: Mount Pleasant Drive, East Fairmount Park

By Public Transit:

  • SEPTA Bus 32
  • Driving recommended

By Car:

  • Drive into Fairmount Park
  • Follow signs to Mount Pleasant
  • Check museum website before visiting
  • The exterior is worth seeing even if closed
  • Combine with other park mansions
  • Architecture enthusiasts will appreciate details

Architectural Significance

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Mount Pleasant matters because:

  • Finest Georgian mansion in Philadelphia
  • Exceptional decorative details
  • Documented contemporary praise
  • Preserved original character
  • National Historic Landmark

Nearby

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See Also

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References

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  1. "Mount Pleasant". Philadelphia Museum of Art. Retrieved December 30, 2025
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