Friday, February 27, 2015

"STONOVER" RESIDENCE OF THE MISSES PARSONS, LENOX, MASSACHUSETTS

      
     "Stonover", was developed by John Edward Parsons, counselor of the American Sugar Refining Company. The house was built, divided, moved, and rebuilt as death made changes in the family.


The house of the first minister for The Church of Lenox Hill-Top, the Rev. Samuel Munson, stood on the site of "Stonover".

  In 1885, the Valley Gleaner reported, "Mr. John E. Parsons' additions to his already sizable mansion are approaching completion with its adjuncts of stable, lodge house, forest, field, and beautiful outlooks over lake and mountain."
  
"Stonover" Residence of Mr. John E. Parsons, LENOX, Mass
    
     By 1921 Architects Delano & Aldrich had transformed the grand Victorian landmark into a sophisticated French country house. 

     Architecture critic Augusta Owen Patterson described the new "Stonover" as one of "those smart smaller houses which are becoming, in our almost servant-less country, more popular every day."  Describing the interior, Patterson wrote, "The core of the present house was a very old homestead, of which the architects took what they wanted and then proceeded to build rooms around it to produce the engaging results.

        The clients were two conservation-minded sisters, Mary and Gertrude Parsons, who had inherited the stately old family house in Lenox from their father. They had long lived under stern paternal control.  Now in their early 50's, the sisters began to enjoy their money. While still in mourning, they took off for China, motoring to distant exotic places in their chauffeur-driven car shipped from home. Back in Lenox, they began to plan a new country house with Delano & Aldrich.  

    Six years after the house was finished, her younger sister, Gertrude, died of pneumonia in Florence on a winter trip. Not long afterward, Mary's brother, Herbert Parsons, died in a freak accident while demonstrating a motorbike to his son at "Stonover Farm".

"STONOVER" RESIDENCE OF THE MISSES PARSONS, LENOX, MASSACHUSETTS
DELANO & ALDRICH, ARCHITECTS
   The L-shaped configuration of the service wing and garage had the rambling informality of a grouping of French agricultural buildings.    


Moving the old "Stonover" deeper into the property, the architects set it amid a grove of majestic elms. 
      The square wooden house originally situated at the top of the hill was removed to the slope, where the site was determined by the natural placing of trees. The building was pulled apart and added to and rebuilt around old rooms for sentimental rather than structural reasons.


The new "Stonover" would be one of the last of the graciously appointed places built in the Berkshires before the Depression.
    One approached the house along an extended driveway past the crown of the hill where the old house had stood and descended into a sheltering courtyard.


Another view of the residence of Miss Mary and Miss Gertrude Parsons at Lenox shows how pleasantly it is set and how well it is embraced with trees.

   
CONNECTING WALL TO ICE-HOUSE, GARAGES, ETC.
    The house is of yellowish stucco and the woodwork is blue.   The walls are of the same material as the building, with coping of variegated green and purple slates like the roof of the house.

The yellowish gray stucco of the house was trimmed a vivid blue around casement windows, French doors, dormers, and eaves. Flanked by a pair of box planters, the arched front door was trimmed with rough faced stone. 

     One stepped from the graveled courtyard directly through the arch and recessed door into a small, square vestibule.

Summertime parties spilled out onto the wide grass terrace, which wrapped around three sides of the house. A low stucco wall surrounded the terrace, forming a natural seat for extra guests. Two splendid stone urns graced the corners. Rambling roses tumbled over the wall and around the terrace doorways. 
   Surrounded by old Berkshire elms, it is the oldest place in the Lenox country, commanding a beautiful view from the south side.


GARDEN TERRACE

DETAIL OF SOUTH FRONT.

THE WHOLE SOUTH SIDE ON THE GROUND FLOOR IS OCCUPIED BY THE LIBRARY, FINISHED IN PANELLED BUTTERNUT.
VIEW FROM TERRACE.

    The most important room was a large paneled library centered on the south side with two bay windows and French doors opening onto the terrace.

TERRACE ON THE SOUTH SIDE. 
VIEW OF HOUSE FROM SOUTH.
  
"STONOVER FARM"

   "Stonover Farm" was built in 1890 by John Parsons as the farm house for the Parsons' estate. At the turn of the century the farmhouse became the home of his son Herbert Parsons, a New York Congressman and his wife Elsie Crews (who was one of the first female anthropologists). 

FARMHOUSE

"STONOVER FARM" BED & BREAKFAST

    Although it was one of the most recently constructed, best-appointed, and well-maintained Lenox country houses, "Stonover" was not destined to long outlive its mistress. After Mary Parsons died in 1940, the next-door neighbors purchased the property to protect their own view and demolished the house. 

    wikimapia.org location.

Thursday, February 26, 2015

MRS. EDWARD T. STOTESBURY

MRS.  EDWARD   T. STOTESBURYFrom the painting by Francois Flameng
    Head of the Philadelphia branch of the American Ambulance, has donated seventy-five thousand dollars to found a school in Paris for the technical training of permanently disabled soldiers. This gift was in response to a plea made by President Poincare for the establishment of several such schools in France.     Both Mr. and   Mrs.   Stotesbury   have  been  active  in war relief work since the outbreak of hostilities. One of the field hospitals in the north of France is supported by them, and they have contributed lavishly to numerous philanthropies for the benefit of wounded soldiers and destitute children.

HARPER'S BAZAR
AUGUST COVER 1916
 

Monday, February 23, 2015

"JERICHO HOUSE" RESIDENCE OF MR. GEORGE EDWARD KENT, Sr., JERICHO, L. I.


RES. OF GEO. E. KENT, JERICHO, L. I. 
HOUSE FROM SOUTH WEST
HOUSE FROM SOUTH WEST
HOUSE FROM SOUTH
HOUSE FROM SOUTH

HOUSE FROM EAST
HOUSE FROM EAST
HOUSE FROM EAST TERRACE
HOUSE FROM EAST TERRACE
HOUSE FROM EAST TERRACE
HOUSE FROM EAST TERRACE
SOUTH SIDE LAWN LOOKING AT THE EAST SIDE PERGOLA
EAST TERRACE FROM CORNER OF HOUSE

EAST TERRACE FROM CORNER OF HOUSE
INSIDE PERGOLA

LOOKING WEST FROM HOUSE INTO SUNKEN GARDEN
SUNKEN GARDEN ON WEST SIDE OF HOUSE
SUNKEN GARDEN ON WEST SIDE OF HOUSE
SUNKEN GARDEN ON WEST SIDE OF HOUSE

PERGOLA ON WEST SIDE OF HOUSE
FROM WEST SHOWING PERGOLA AND POOL
FROM WEST
FROM SUNKEN GARDEN LOOKING EAST TOWARDS HOUSE
HORNBEAM WALK LOOKING FROM SOUTH SIDE OF SUNKEN GARDEN

FROM WEST SHOWING WALK


NORTH-WEST SIDE LOOKING TOWARDS HOUSE
 ON THE OTHER SIDE OF PERGOLA IS THE SUNKEN GARDEN
LOOKING WEST FROM HOUSE
SKETCH OF PROPOSED RESIDENCE FOR GEORGE E. KENT BY WILSON EYRE, 1906

   Per SPLIA "The Kent house, as built, did not reflect Eyre's hand..... and is now demolished." 

   In 1913 Architect William Welles Bosworth solicited bids in The American Contractor for the construction of Mr Kent's house  - "Architect will take bids until March 26th. Hollow tile & stucco & cast concrete stone, tar & gravel roofing. Barrett roofing felt, oak, hazelwood, whitewood & cypress trim, oak & tile floors, marble, tile, mantels, gas & electric fixtures, Atlas or Lehigh cement."

   Attorney George Edward Kent, Sr. and his wife Lillias Grace Kent were to build in the Long Island hamlet of Jericho in the town of Oyster Bay, New York.  It was going to be an expensive house: about $80,000 for construction.  (That's about $1.5 million today(2005) using the consumer price index, but $24 million using relative share of GDP.)  

Another example of the English type of house.   The airplane view shows very clearlv how, although there are other houses in the comparatively near neighborhood, the place has been so cleverly planned for seclusion that it has the effect of being part of a big estate. Country Homes of Today


Nassau County 1939 Long Island
Dolph & Stewart
Historic Aerials 1966