Templemoor

"Templemoor", also known as the Post-Crawford House, is a historic home located near Clarksburg approximately halfway between Romines Mills and Peeltree, in Harrison County, West Virginia. It was built in 1874 for Ira Carper Post, and is a $2 1/2$-story brick mansion in the Italianate style. It features a combination hip and gable roof covered in polychrome slate shingles. It was the boyhood home of noted West Virginia author Melville Davisson Post (1869-1930) who was famous for mystery and fiction novels. The home includes 13 rooms, many featuring top-of-the-line woodwork.

It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.

Design Features
The house has witnessed relatively few physical changes and remains much as it was when it was the seat of a 2,000-acre farm. A working farm of 300 acres still surrounds the house. The imposing character of the house is due in part to the deep lawn fronting upon the entrance elevation and extending approximately 150 feet to the highway. A curving carriage path extended in the 19th century across the lawn to the front porch, but its former course is now marked only by several evergreen trees.

Most Italianate features of the mansion are seen in the front elevation. A low-pitched cross gable centered with a round-topped window graces the facade above the single-bay porch. The tall narrow windows of both the first and second stories are headed with segmental brick arches and are capped with brick bochm1ds. A brick beltcourse at the frieze level provides footing for paired wooden brackets of the eaves. Alternating large (scroll) and small (rectangular) moden brackets embellish the eaves of the east-facing and north-facing gables. This bracketwork treatment is typical of the mid-Victorian Italianate period house.

The combination hip and gable roof is ensheathed with well-preserved slate shingles in color bands of gray, green, and red. The red tone is especially eye-catching. Rising at the center of the roof mass is a square cupola with round-topped windows and bracketed eaves. A single-story round parlor bay window faces north; it is roofed with a metal mansard bonnet.

The south facade is pierced with a 2-story round bay window, which is southwest of a significant secondary entrance. Sidelights of this doorway are tall, narrow arched panes in brilliant (original) blue glass. The sandstone foundation blocks beneath the bay windows and throughout the foundation course generally exhibit hammered/textured surfaces.