Tales Tall but True of Woodland Plantation (2024)

John Berendt said it best. Following a visit to Woodland Plantation late last year, the celebrated author of Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil wrote, “There is something heroic about loving a house enough to tow it three hundred miles along winding back roads in order to rescue it, restore it and put it in a better place.”

That’s what Cammie and David Norwood did when, ten years ago, Cammie spied a stately but abandoned antebellum home on a rural St. Landry parish byway, and the couple undertook to relocate it to ancestral property near St. Francisville.

As the crow flies, only about thirty-five miles separate Woodland’s past and present sites. But so large and tall was the building that it had to travel 375 miles of roads and bridges before finally coming to rest in West Feliciana. Although Woodland is separated by several parishes and 160 years from the place it was in 1850, those that visit during this month’s Audubon Pilgrimage will discover that the tale of how this house came “home” involves more twists and turns than the roads it traveled to get here.

Woodland’s story begins in St. Francisville, where during the first half of the nineteenth century, one Major Amos Webb prospered as a theatre owner and postmaster before ultimately relocating to St. Landry Parish. There he chose to build a fine home—part Greek Revival, part French Creole—for his son, Lewis Archibald Webb, and chose for it the name “Woodland.”

But by the time Cammie Norwood came across it, the house had gone through multiple changes of ownership and name, and ultimately been abandoned. The house was now named Macland and in serious disrepair, with a deteriorated cedar shake roof and massive water damage. Nevertheless the Norwoods—both ardent preservationists—were attracted to it. So it must have seemed like serendipity a year later, when a Baton Rouge neighbor showed Cammie a photo of the same house and divulged that it was about to be torn down. “Woodland was where her grandmother had been born,” recalled Cammie. “She was a Thistlewaite; they bought the house in about 1900.” While researching, the Norwoods discovered not only the historical threads between the home’s builder and St. Francisville; but also that there were connections between Major Webb and David Norwood’s ancestors, the Barrow family, that owned or built many of the historically significant homes that still stand in the St. Francisville area (Webb had lived at the magnificent home Live Oak, prior to its being acquired by the Barrow Family in 1824).

In a massive undertaking that involved cutting the house in two and removing the roof and central hall, the Norwoods moved the structure to family property adjacent to Highland Plantation, which is also on tour during this year’s Audubon Pilgrimage. A two-and-a-half-year restoration followed. The house was raised a foot-and-a-half and its lowest floor was rebuilt. But the core of the home, which retains all of its original doors and millwork, was preserved.

Also preserved were the stories, which would seem to be in good hands so long as David Norwood is telling them. Clearly the longtime illustrator, whose cartoons were a fixture in the Baton Rouge Advocate for decades, relishes the details of Woodland’s colorful history as much as he does the original millwork. One tale that dates from the Civil War years recounts the widow of Lewis Webb (who died in the war) dissuading passing Union soldiers from replenishing their water supplies from the plantation cistern by telling them that it had been polluted with dead cats. So taken was Norwood with this story that he built a replica cistern at Woodland to help him with its retelling. Whether it contains any cats or not we could not say.

No surprise, then, that a master storyteller like author John Berendt should find much to admire during a visit to Woodland. Berendt divides his time between New York and New Orleans and has made several visits to St. Francisville, drawn by the rolling topography, its unusual number of historic plantation houses, and as he puts it, “a few extremelyodd attractions that appeal to me—like the Angola Prison Rodeo.”

I have enjoyed getting to know John Berendt since being asked to escort him around town a couple of years ago. So when he called to invite me to attend the Angola Rodeo the same weekend as my interview at Woodland, I invited him to come along.

The Norwoods were excited to meet the man behind Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil. “David sat at the kitchen table and read your book to me,” exclaimed Cammie. “We had the best time reading it!”

“We liked it so much we went to Savannah for New Year’s Eve!,” David revealed. “And even ate at the café.”

Appreciation, it seems, flowed both ways.

“The house is clearly loved, and it seems to know it,” wrote Berendt in an email following our visit to Woodland. “You can almost feel a sigh of relief wafting through its center hall and spacious rooms.” He continued, “Historic houses appeal to me because, when you think about it, most of them are beautiful. The passage of time ennobles most old houses, no matter how modest they are.Generations that have passed through the house leave an accumulation of wear and tear, creating a patina you won’t find in any new house—and that, for me, is the most appealing thing about historic houses: the stories that played out in them still linger as ghosts, or simply as atmosphere.”

Nowhere is this truer than at Woodland, a house where—even after 160 years, multiple generations, and three hundred miles—new stories are still being written.

Details. Details. Details.

This month, visit Woodland Plantation during Audubon Pilgrimage, March 16—18.

Other homes and gardens on tour this year are Highland Plantation, Hillcroft, Prospect, three nineteenth-century churches, Oakley Plantation at Audubon State Historic Site, Rosedown Plantation at Rosedown State Historic Site, the Rural Homestead, and Afton Villa Gardens. Daytime tours from 9:30 am– 5 pm each day. Friday and Saturday night entertainment includes candlelit graveyard tours, music, and a street dance. See the related calendar listing on page 25 or visit audubonpilgrimage.info for more information.

Ellen Kennon is an interior designer who moved from Manhattan to a little cabin in the woods in West Feliciana Parish over twenty years ago. She developed her own line of Full Spectrum Paints that has been featured in numerous national publications, including Architectural Digest, House Beautiful Magazine and the Wall Street Journal. www.ellenkennon.com.

Tales Tall but True of Woodland Plantation (2024)

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Due to the impact of urbanization, there are many differences in the environment between urban areas and surrounding natural areas, such as temperature, precipitation, and air pollution, which lead to different living conditions of trees [6].

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In forests, a tree's growth strategy is to a large extent determined by a struggle for light, either by growing taller toward brighter conditions or by expanding leaf area or crown size to capture more of the available light.

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The rate of growth for Sequoias never slows and this is over a natural lifetime that can span thousands of years. They continue to add layers at the same rate throughout their long life so that as they grow in height and girth they incrementally layer on more wood every year.

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Armstrong Red Maple Tree (Acer rubrum 'Armstrong')

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Climate, soil, the ability of soil to hold water, and the slope, or angle, of the land all determine what types of plants will grow in a particular region.

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The two primary determinants of height growth are the number of height growth units (the node plus its subtending internode) produced during each growing season and elongation of the internodes.

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Hyperion is a coast redwood (Sequoia sempervirens) in California that is the world's tallest known living tree, measuring 115.92 m (380.3 ft).

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But why is there a limit? Trees are supposed to be nature's skyscrapers, impossible to hem in. This cap exists because trees can only pull water so far up their trunks. The transporters in question are pitted dead cells, called tracheids, that move water from one cell to the next.

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Trees grow in the opposite fashion; they grow from the top. Specialized cells in the ends of each tree shoot (including the primary leader) form areas called meristems. These meristems are the locations from which a tree grows taller and limbs grow longer.

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Just like people, leaves do not grow indefinitely. Once they reach a given size, they stop growing.

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In plants, this occurs in growing zones called meristems and is controlled by three hormones: auxin, gibberellin and cytokinin. The meristems in shoot and root tips are responsible for making a plant taller and longer, which allows leaves to reach sunlight and roots to spread out through the soil.

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Columnar or fastigiate trees grow upright and tend to be narrow. These upright trees can be short or tall and are mainly selected for tight spaces in the landscape. They are also used in the home landscape for an upscale look. Planting Columnar Trees can increase your curb appeal and home value.

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Columnar trees will grow straight up, making them perfect for yards with small spaces or just need more privacy. With columnar trees, you don't need as much space for growth. Many have fastigiate branches, which means they grow almost straight up rather than out from the tree, narrowing the size of the tree's canopy.

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Redwood trees are the tallest trees in the world. The park is home to some that rise more than 107 meters (350 feet) into the air. The park's redwood trees are called coast redwoods (Sequoia sempervirens). Their range stretches along the coast of California.

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