Photography by Bruce A deArmond
1800 was still an era of gentlemen builders - The professional architect was emerging in post-Revolution America. There is no evidence or drawings of an architect for the Homewood. However, there is verification that the builder, the Edwards Brothers, very skilled and well-established, contracted with Carroll for the project. Built on a Palladian-inspired five-part plan, Homewood is renowned for its fine craftsmanship and materials.
There is extravagant detail in all aspects of the construction of Homewood, from the intricately carved wooden fireplace surrounds, doorways, and chair rails to the marble-painted baseboards, mahogany-grained doors, and the ornate plaster ceiling ornaments. With elegant proportions, fine artistry, and materials, its plan, all on one floor, was an open approach. Guests could move from room to room through doors on the south side. Doors at the north end of the rooms could be closed to conceal service activity along the central passage. Homewood is furnished as it would have been when the Carrolls resided there. Interior spaces and brightly colored rooms are filled with items associated with the Carroll family and others representative of the period, including many superb examples of Baltimore furniture. Homewood remains a window into early 19th-century Baltimore history and its architectural and design evolution.