On November 20, 1824, over of land was turned over to a bank in Lancaster by a farmer. The bank sold and 68
square perches (18,513 ft2; 1,720 m2) of that land, on January 29, 1828, for $11,731.87, (equal to $ today), through the use of a
straw man, to William Jenkins, a lawyer and, then, president of said bank. Jenkins had a house constructed on the property and named it "The Wheatlands", either after the surrounding
wheatfields or because the site of the house used to be a wheatfield. Jenkins sold and 25 square perches (7,010 ft2; 651 m2) of land, including the house, to his
son-in-law Thomas Fuller Potter in 1836.
William M. Meredith bought the same plot on May 8, 1845, plus an additional , for $6,750, equal to $ today. Meredith used it as primarily a
summer house and as a home for his wife and children; Meredith's duties as head of the
bar in
Philadelphia prevented him from living at Wheatland on a permanent basis. Wheatland was put up for sale by Meredith and was contacted in June 1848 by
Secretary of State James Buchanan, who was interested in the house. The sale of Wheatland was delayed by Meredith, who was not sure whether he really wanted to sell the estate, and by Buchanan, who did not want to force Meredith into making a decision that he might regret. Wheatland was sold in December 1848 at the same price that Meredith had purchased it at; Buchanan moved into the mansion several months later, accompanied by his niece,
Harriet Lane, and nephew,
James Buchanan "Buck" Henry, and his
housekeeper, Esther "Miss Hetty" Parker. Buchanan ran unsuccessfully for the
Democratic Party's nomination for President in the
1852 election, however he was appointed the
Minister to Great Britain by the newly elected
Franklin Pierce. Buchanan did not return to the United States, and to Wheatland, until 1856. Not long after arriving back at Wheatland, Buchanan was nominated by the Democratic Party to be its candidate for President on June 9, 1856. Buchanan did not tour the country as part of the campaign. Instead, he conducted it from Wheatland as a "
front porch campaign". Buchanan won the election and carried all of the
Southern states, with most of the votes in the
Northern states going to the
Republican nominee
John C. Frémont. Part of Buchanan's success in the South was his, and the
party platform's, support of the
Kansas–Nebraska Act. One of the tactics used in the campaign involved
lithographs of Wheatland being printed and circulated, primarily in the South, "as a polite way of informing the Southerners that the Democratic candidate, though from the North, had a 'plantation estate' and held a course of life similar to their own."
Post-presidency During his presidency, Buchanan returned to Wheatland sporadically and never for very long. He retired to Wheatland in 1861, after the election of
Abraham Lincoln and the end of his term as President. Buchanan died in the main bedroom on the second floor in Wheatland on June 1, 1868. Thousands of people attended Buchanan's funeral and the
procession from Wheatland to the
Woodward Hill Cemetery on June 4. The estate was inherited by Harriet Lane, who used it as a summer house. After both of Lane's sons died—one in 1881 and the other a year later—and a few weeks after her husband died, Lane sold Wheatland in 1884 to George Willson. Wheatland was inherited by Mary Willson Rettew, a cousin of George Willson, after he died of a
heart attack in 1929. Rettew died in 1934 and, left a
will stipulating "the establishment of 'The Willson Memorial Building'" to preserve the family's
heirlooms. Her will also requested that the building be occupied by the Lancaster County Historical Society, which had been founded in 1880. Wheatland, along with of land, were put up for sale by the
executors of the will. The Junior League of Lancaster founded the "James Buchanan Foundation for the Preservation of Wheatland" in 1935 with the purpose of raising funds to buy Wheatland. Wheatland was sold to the Foundation for $40,000 (equal to $ today) on February 27, 1936. It was opened to the public on May 5, 1936 and was dedicated "as a new presidential shrine, taking its place with
Mount Vernon,
Monticello and
The Hermitage," in October 1937. Wheatland was designated a
National Historic Landmark on July 4, 1961 and listed on the
National Register of Historic Places on October 15, 1966. Wheatland became a
contributing property to the
Northeast Lancaster Township Historic District on March 20, 1986. The James Buchanan Foundation and the neighboring Lancaster County Historical Society were merged in 2009 to form LancasterHistory.org. == Architecture and decor ==