Belcher windows
My great friend Tom Miller writes the blog Daytonian in Manhattan . Tom isn't an architect but he knows more about architectural history than anyone I've ever met. Tom's a 30-year resident of Manhattan and he's a consummate New Yorker. Every corner of that town has had something notable happen on it and I swear Tom knows every one of those stories. Last winter, he started a blog about Manhattan architectural history and five days he week he publishes a new story of a building.
On the 3rd of September he wrote a post called The House the Circus Built --10 St. Nicholas Place . And in his post he told a story of James Bailey. Bailey was the Bailey of Barnum and Bailey. Baily's home from 1880 is still standing and in a remarkable state of preservation. What caught my eye about it particularly were the stained glass windows it held.
The Bailey House featured windows made by means of the Belcher Mosaic Glass employer and those windows are a number of the remaining surviving examples of the Belcher Company's work.
A Belcher Mosaic window from the Bailey House |
Belcher evolved a brand new approach for making mosaic home windows as opposed to the same old stained glass strategies used because the early middle a while. Rather than using lead cames between the character pieces of glass, Belcher patented a process in which he'd lay out the sample of the window between sheets of asbestos. Then he poured a molten lead alloy over the entire works. The molten alloy might waft between the portions of glass and make a strong window.
This process allowed Belcher to use much smaller pieces than most stained glass windows use and he could use pieces of glass that were in regular, repeating shapes --triangles usually but sometimes squares.
The Belcher Mosaic Glass Company went out of business in 1880 and a handful of these windows survive. I think they're fascinating. Almost as fascinating as I find Tom's blog . Check it out and if you're ever in Manhattan and you need a tour guide, I know the best one out there.