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Piatt Castles

[links are in bold]
Last weekend Amanda and I drove to Dayton for a nice visit with mom, dad and my cousin Lisa who we only see every eight years or so it seems. We planned our way home via one of the many castle-like structures that are scattered around Ohio. Mac-A-Chee and Mac-A-Cheek are within a mile of each other in West Liberty, Ohio.

Heading north on 68 through Urbana I realized I used to drive that route all the time in college because I would head up to Mad River Mountain to snowboard whenever I had the chance, usually late at night and always alone. It was raining on and off last Monday but by the time we reached the properties it was breezy and beautiful.

Click here for all photos
Mac-A-Chee Castle Mac-A-Chee Castle Mac-A-Cheek Castle Mac-A-Cheek Castle Mac-A-Chee Castle

I would not call these structures castles and neither would you, as they are more like stately homes in the design of vague European castle-like structures. But in the late 1800s they must have seemed incredibly grand and unique for the landscape, as they still are today. What an eclectic bunch the Piatt family was, for two brothers to build such  grandiose homes a mile apart.

Ironically they knew right away that their homes were of public interest, because shortly after building them they were opened up to tours for money. The Piatt’s that lived at Mac-A-Cheek sequestered themselves in only two rooms of the home to keep the rest open and available to an enthusiastic paying public. These days it’s still a great visit, the houses and the grounds are beautiful if a bit expensive at $20 per person to see both estates.

[from piattcastles.org]
“Like the Mecoche division of the Shawnee people who occupied the land before them, the Piatts treasure the resources and the spirit of the valley they call home. In the 1820’s, Judge Benjamin M. and Elizabeth Barnett Piatt moved their family from Cincinnati to the rolling hills of Logan County. Two of their children, Abram Sanders and Donn later built their own homes, Mac-A-Cheek and Mac-O-Chee in the country-side they knew as youths. These unique structures have become a private, family-owned museum that interprets over 200 years of history of the Ohio land and Ohio people.”

Discussion

One comment for “Piatt Castles”

  1. Dear Craig,

    I have just read your account of the Piatt Castles. As a prelude to a biography of Donn Piatt that I am just now completing, I published an article on him which perhaps you might enjoy reading, which you can find at

    http://www.unc.edu/depts/diplomat/item/2007/0103/life/bridges_piatt.html .

    Sincerely,

    Peter Bridges

    Posted by Peter Bridges | July 25, 2009, 9:35 am

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