Thursday, October 31, 2013

Monica Randall Halloween


Click HERE for a paranormal conversation with Monica Randall - Long Island's Haunted Gold Coast Mansions.


HAPPY HALLOWEEN

Click HERE to read last years Halloween post.

Thursday, October 24, 2013

THE NEWPORT RESIDENCE of MRS. RICHARD GAMBRILL



    MRS. RICHARD GAMBRILL'S chateau on Bellevue Avenue is one of the rarely beautiful homes of Newport. Set in the midst of superb gardens whose hedge-bordered lawns slope toward the avenue, the house composes perfectly with its surroundings. The windows of every room afford enchanting glimpses of gardens, of pergolas where tea is served on those afternoons when the chatelaine is not "teaing" somewhere else; of terraces where coffee is served under the rays of the moon, or of soft-toned electric lights. The interior of the house is well worthy of its surroundings. Although marble is used very extensively, there is no atmosphere of coldness nor of a  too great formality. The entrance hall is almost austere in its treatment, but its charm of outline and the color note given by the tapestries counteract the effect of the marble walls and pillars.


    The dining-room is a ceremonious apartment overlooking the red garden. The tones of the geraniums, the salvias and the rambler roses are repeated in the hangings and the rug of this gracious room. Of unusual interest are the two side tables of marble which take the place of the more conventional sideboard. The lighting fixtures are exquisitely beautiful. Mrs. Gambrill, in fact, has a penchant for beautiful fixtures; and those in every room are an artistic joy. Over one of the marble side tables hangs a portrait by Sir Peter Lely.

DOWN IN FRONT!

    The drawing-room is truly regal in coloring and treatment, but with all its splendor it is thoroughly livable. The walls of French walnut are a delightful background for the paintings which incidentally are used but sparingly, for this is truly a summer home, not a "winter palace". This room is delightful and as a "period room" it is practically perfect. The long windows open toward the terrace, which overlooks the sunken garden and fountain.


    The flower room or little salon is a study in the softest tones of gray, du Barry rose and green, just the colors that predominate in the gardens without. The gray tone is given to the garden by the profuse use, in its borders, of dusty miller, which blends with the various shades of pink and rose from which these gardens take their name.

   Click THIS LINK for more on the Newport residence of Mrs. Richard Gambrill. THIS LINK to view a post from the man with the golden key. 


MRS. RICHARD GAMBRILL

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

"NORTHWAY" RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS, GREENWICH, CONNECTICUT


RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS

   TWO MILES out of town on what the late architect Alan Burnham called "the Fifth Avenue of Greenwich," there is a startling sight. Here, possibly with a sense of deja vu, one immediately recognizes the Petit Trianon from the gardens at Versailles. While such a phenomenon would not be surprising in New York City, it is certainly out of context in Greenwich, Connecticut. 

   "Northway", or The Petit Trianon Deux, as it is more commonly called, was the result of a whim. It was built between 1910 and 1913 by Laura Robinson (d. 1964), a lady in her middle thirties, born in Chicago, who was an heiress to both the Diamond Match and the Goodrich Tire fortunes. In June 1910 Laura, her mother, Eleanor, and her sister, 

   Henrietta, bought a little over fourteen acres of land with the intention of building their own personal palace on it. Why these ladies wanted a chateau is a mystery, but such an extravagance is perfectly possible with great wealth and is certainly the prerogative of any princess. In August 1910, after a falling out with her sister, Laura became sole owner of the land and sought permission of the French government to construct a copy of one of France's architectural treasures. The French government initially objected to the exact replica so the position of a staircase was reversed so there was a slight difference. Robinson hired the New York architects J. Edwin R. Carpenter and Walter D. Blair to adapt the design of her chosen chateau. Henrietta returned to Chicago and built her own mansion — without the blessing of the French. This unauthorized 2nd unauthentic chateau is now the International Museum of Surgical Science on Lake Shore Drive.

   It took three years and $1 million to complete the Greenwich version of the Petit Trianon. Both Carpenter and Blair had studied at the Ecolc des Beaux-Arts in Paris and were well qualified for the challenge. They created a near-perfect copy of their model, making certain modifications to retain the perfection of proportion dictated by the smaller acreage. The design is scaled down from twenty-six rooms to thirteen, and Robinson had two lower wings added, one on each side. The outer walls are brick, covered with plaster or stucco, but they are white. And the reflecting pool with its fountain is located in front of the divided staircase to the entrance. 

FRONT GATES
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS

DRIVEWAY ENTRANCE
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS

 It was necessary for Robinson's gardeners to climb sixty-foot ladders to prune these trees, creating what Laura Robinson called her bosquet.


DRIVEWAY ENTRANCE
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS

VIEW FROM HOUSE
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS
 
POOL
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS

  While Robinson's pool is rectangular, the original is circular and sits at the head of the long lawn, flanked by the drive on either side. The trees at Versailles that edge the drive are shaped with an upward scoop; those along the approach in Greenwich are clipped into strict rectangles.


ARRIVAL COURT
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS

ARRIVAL COURT
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS


ARRIVAL COURT
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS

BACKSIDE OF HOUSE
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS

RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS

RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS
  
   The interior design of "Northway" remains faithful to Gabriel's work. One enters between two small salons into the spacious front hall where a pipe organ once played beneath the graceful staircase that sweeps away at the right. The staircase at Versailles, of which this is a replica, shows the gentle modification of the rococo used throughout the chateau and is considered the loveliest of the Louis XVI period. Delicate paneling continues the Louix XVI style in every room. On the left of the hall is the living room with a gallery or loggia. On the right is the handsome dining room and the most famous of Laura Robinson's few deviations from the French master; in one of the murals adorning the dining room walls, the likeness of Marie Antoinette was replaced with that of Miss Robinson.


MAIN HALL, STAIRCASE AND ORIGINAL ORGAN
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS

VIEW OF LIVING ROOM INTO HALL
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS

 LIVING ROOM
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS

VIEW OF DINING ROOM
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS


DETAIL OF DINING ROOM
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS
VIEW OF DINING ROOM
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS

SOUTH PORCH
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS

SOUTH PORCH
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS
  
NORTH PORCH
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS

   

MASTER BEDROOM
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS


BEDROOM
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS

GUESTS ROOM
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS


GUESTS ROOM
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS



GUESTS ROOM
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS


   For fifty years this magnificent residence was the scene of glittering entertainments and delightful musicales. The furnishings were exquisite eighteenth century, either authentic pieces or excellent reproductions. Every detail was reproduced from the original, including the doorknobs. The floors were parquet on the first floor and hardwood above, all covered with the finest of carpets. There were seven bedrooms and seven baths. The three chimneys served eight fireplaces.

RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS

    A garage and stables with five servants' rooms were built in 1913, as was a potting shed and the greenhouse, the latter with three bedrooms and a bath. The formal gardens were famous, a tribute to both the eye of the owner and the skill of her many gardeners.


GREENHOUSE, GARAGES AND SERVANT QUARTERS
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS

GREENHOUSE, GARAGES AND SERVANT QUARTERS
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS
GREENHOUSE ENTRANCE
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS

GREENHOUSE INTERIOR
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS

GREENHOUSE SKETCH
RESIDENCE OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EVANS. GREENWICH, CONN.
 J. E. R. CARPENTER AND WALTER D. BLAIR ASSOC. ARCHITECTS

  
 Laura Robinson married William A. Evans in 1915, two years after the completion of her chateau. Evans was the scion of an old South Carolina family, a graduate of Hobart College, and a prominent New York lawyer. Incredibly, his mother's name was Marie Antoinette. Laura and her husband had one child, William Alexander, Jr., who was killed in an automobile accident in 1939 shortly before his twenty-fourth birthday. Evans died two months later, but his widow lived until 1964. Laura Robinson Evans willed half of "Northway" to Christ Church in Greenwich and the other half to the Greenwich Hospital. These institutions in turn sold the estate to two New York City antique dealers, whose sole interest in "Northway" was the furnishings. They were apparently unaware that Parke-Bernet had a contract for these treasures; nearly $100,000 was realized from their sale at auction in 1966. The chateau was sold again in 1967, empty of antiques but as solid in structure as when it was built. Today the Petit Trianon Deux remains a stunning monument to a woman whose dream it was and who brought a bit of eighteenth-century France to Greenwich. Source
  
   Indie film "Stateside", a romantic drama starring Val Kilmer and Carrie Fisher, has scenes from the mansion.




   Back in 2010 the house was listed for $39 million with eighteen acres. It sold for $12 million, its current value is just under $9 million. "it’s kind of like that apocryphal Texan: all hat, no cattle, because it seems to be all of ten foot wide." Source    Click HERE to see at wikimapia. BING


THE PETIE TRIANON FROM THE GARDENS AT VERSAILLES.

  Take a stroll around the original HERE.



Thursday, October 17, 2013

"WINFIELD HALL" 1932

Pictured here is "Winfield Hall", occupied by Richard Samuel Reynolds at the time the photograph was taken. 
   "In an age of high-tech and high-rise, the mansion stands patiently waiting for a new visionary to take control and once again breathe life into its opulent interiors. Ran Development Group, along with Denise Carey, a registered architect herself, can put together a design/build package to restore the mansion to its former glory and fast forward this incredible home into the 21st Century."


   Click HERE for all past posts related to Franklin Winfield Woolworth's Long Island Gold Coast mansion "Winfield Hall".

Friday, October 11, 2013

RESIDENCE OF MR. LEWIS LUCKENBACH, NORTH COUNTRY COLONY, GLEN COVE, LONG ISLAND




  THE house is built of Holland brick, a very soft pinkish gray, the color of an old wall, with cornices of brick patterns, and ornamented cast lead gutters. The stone trim and balustrades are a rich creamy travertino while the shutters are gray-green to harmonize with the willows. The roof is French shingle tile, a sepia with a reddish tone, carrying the same soft pearly warmth of the rest of the house into a darker tone. From the north terrace, shown on the preceding page, the lawn slopes down to a pond screened by the willows which form such an important part of the landscape setting. There was practically no attempt at landscape design in the grounds surrounding the house—its charm comes from the very natural informality of the setting.


RESIDENCE OF MR. LEWIS LUCKENBACH 
WILLIAM LAWRENCE BOTTOMLEY, ARCHITECT
 


RESIDENCE OF MR. LEWIS LUCKENBACH 
WILLIAM LAWRENCE BOTTOMLEY, ARCHITECT
 

RESIDENCE OF MR. LEWIS LUCKENBACH 
WILLIAM LAWRENCE BOTTOMLEY, ARCHITECT


RESIDENCE OF MR. LEWIS LUCKENBACH 
WILLIAM LAWRENCE BOTTOMLEY, ARCHITECT
 

RESIDENCE OF MR. LEWIS LUCKENBACH 
WILLIAM LAWRENCE BOTTOMLEY, ARCHITECT
 

RESIDENCE OF MR. LEWIS LUCKENBACH 
WILLIAM LAWRENCE BOTTOMLEY, ARCHITECT
 


RESIDENCE OF MR. LEWIS LUCKENBACH
WILLIAM LAWRENCE BOTTOMLEY, ARCHITECT
 THEDLOW, INC., DECORATORS
  In the dining room, parchment colored woodwork sets of the hand-painted paper, with views of Rome in sepia on a straw-colored background.





RESIDENCE OF MR. LEWIS LUCKENBACH 
WILLIAM LAWRENCE BOTTOMLEY, ARCHITECT
 THEDLOW, INC., DECORATORS
  In the little card room the pink beige walls form an ideal background for bright notes of the red lacquer Chinese Chippendale chairs and frames.





RESIDENCE OF MR. LEWIS LUCKENBACH 
WILLIAM LAWRENCE BOTTOMLEY, ARCHITECT
 THEDLOW, INC., DECORATORS
   In the library the paneling is of California redwood, bleached pink. The upholstery carries out the scheme in tones of beige and soft pinks, grays, and greens. The antique French wallpaper from Nancy McClelland has a green ground with pink, green, and brown in the design. In most of the interiors Mr. Bottomley was responsible for the paneling and backgrounds while Mrs. Cecil Baker of Thedlow did the decorating.




RESIDENCE OF MR. LEWIS LUCKENBACH 
WILLIAM LAWRENCE BOTTOMLEY, ARCHITECT
 THEDLOW, INC., DECORATORS
   The drawing room is paneled in sycamore, with an antique English mantel of Mr. Luckenbach's cleverly fitted in. The two small tables flanking the fireplace are particularly worthy of note, painted satin wood in the Adam style after Angelica Kauffmann




RESIDENCE OF MR. LEWIS LUCKENBACH 
WILLIAM LAWRENCE BOTTOMLEY, ARCHITECT
 THEDLOW, INC., DECORATORS
    The upstairs breakfast room overlooking the lake.







GUEST ROOM
RESIDENCE OF MR. LEWIS LUCKENBACH 

WILLIAM LAWRENCE BOTTOMLEY, ARCHITECT
 THEDLOW, INC., DECORATORS

A FRENCH ALCOVE IN ANOTHER GUEST ROOM
RESIDENCE OF MR. LEWIS LUCKENBACH 

WILLIAM LAWRENCE BOTTOMLEY, ARCHITECT
 THEDLOW, INC., DECORATORS

THE OWNERS BEDROOM, DRESSING ROOMS FOR THE OWNER AND HIS WIFE OPEN OFF THIS BEDROOM
RESIDENCE OF MR. LEWIS LUCKENBACH 
WILLIAM LAWRENCE BOTTOMLEY, ARCHITECT
 THEDLOW, INC., DECORATORS
   

 wikimapia.org location. BING. The property has been on the market for a number of years. Zillow has it listed for $15,500,000 after a recent $500,000 price cut. Additional photos and video HERE. Lewis Luckenbach was the grandson of the founder of the Luckenbach Steamship Company.