The McFaddin-Ward House was built in 1905-06 in the striking and
distinctive Beaux-Arts Colonial style. The structure and its furnishings reflect the lifestyle of the prominent family who lived in the house for seventy-five years.
When W. P. H. and Ida Caldwell McFaddin moved their young family, two
sons and one daughter, into their house in 1907, Beaumont was still enjoying the economic effects of the discovery of oil at nearby Spindletop in 1901. Having already accumulated considerable wealth from the cattle business, rice farming and milling, commercial real estate, and trapping, the family prospered even further
after Spindletop, since Mr. McFaddin owned part interest in the land where oil was discovered.
The McFaddin's home was one of a number of grand residences built in town
by local architect, Henry Conrad Mauer, during the early twentieth century.
Mauer, trained at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York, incorporated
local materials with the most advanced electrical, water, heating, and
indoor plumbing systems of the time. The home was initially built for
Colonel W. C. Averill and his wife Di, the sister of W. P. H. McFaddin.
After living in the house for several months, the Averills decided to trade
houses with the McFaddins, who lived near by. In early January 1907, the
McFaddins moved in.
The house served as a lavish backdrop for the frequent entertainments and elegant parties the McFaddins hosted. In 1919, the McFaddins' daughter Mamie married Carroll Ward, and the couple moved into this house with her parents. They lived their entire lives there, making few changes to the house or its décor after 1950.
Today, visitors to the house receive guided tours of three lavishly furnished floors in the home. Trained guides combine family stories and local history with information about the house and its furnishings to tell the story of the McFaddin family and the era 1906-1950.
