Showing posts with label Aerials. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aerials. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 11, 2018

Some Views of "Meudon"




"MEUDON" 
W. D. GUTHRIE   LOCUST VALLEY, NEW YORK   C. P. H. GILBERT, ARCHITECT
"MEUDON"
W. D. GUTHRIE   LOCUST VALLEY, NEW YORK   C. P. H. GILBERT, ARCHITECT
"MEUDON" 
W. D. GUTHRIE   LOCUST VALLEY, NEW YORK   C. P. H. GILBERT, ARCHITECT

"MEUDON"
Aerial View of farm complex
 W. D. GUTHRIE   LOCUST VALLEY, NEW YORK   C. P. H. GILBERT, ARCHITECT

Follow THIS LINK for more on the Guthrie estate.



Saturday, June 2, 2012

The Elusive "Vikings Cove"

Built for George Fisher Baker Jr. Another Walker & Gillette design.  According to SPLIA "it is perhaps the most traditional in plan and scale of all the firm's Georgian Revival designs." I use ELUSIVE because I can not find much on this place or the Baker's. Putting two and two together and getting five I conclude the family followed the birth, marriage, death doctrine. Baker's father was a pal of J.P. Morgan and was know as the "Sphinx of Wall Street". In 1923 his net worth was  estimated to be upwards of $300million. Junior was to marry Edith Beavoort Kane in 1911 with the opening of "Vikings Cove" in 1913. Most notorious for the family and the setting was the Baker/Woodward/Duchess of Windsor diner and the subsequent  history that followed.  

***"Vikings Cove" - George Fisher Baker Jr. Estate - Walekr & Gillette, Architects - Note the bathing pavilion from "Ormstron House" at bottom right.***

***Brochure Cover - Edith Kane Baker -Sotheby Parke Bernet - 1977***
Click HERE to see "Vikings Cove" at wikimapia. Click HERE to read, in George's own words, where he felt his life was at in 1914. HERE to  the Finding Aid to the Baker Family Papers. HERE to see more from the Sotheby Parke Bernet brochure. HERE for more on the relationship of the Duchess and Edith Baker. Death Doctrine

Side note- In 1906 Walker married Sybil Kane , daughter  of Grenvile Kane, Sybil's sister was Edith Brevoort Kane Baker.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

"Rosemary Farm"

"ROSEMARY - THAT'S FOR REMEMBRANCE": AND ROSEMARY FARM, THAT'S FOR LOVE AND MEMORY, TOO. ***unknown author - 1918***


THE most intangible and lovable quality about a country place is atmosphere, that air of charm and accrued memories which cannot be bought or built. It is usually the fruition of the years, an amalgam of nature and art and time. All along the shores of Long Island are coming into being great houses
beautiful grounds which a century hence may have
achieved atmosphere, but which today proclaim only the affluence and taste of their owners. The earth has not welded them to herself, they rest lightly on the ground, suns and storms have not mellowed their color, and birth, and death, and living have not yet made of them homes. The man who desires a mansion can secure one by the combination of a big architect and a big purse; but the man who desires to put into outward expression his ideal of home and hospitality must put himself into the job of home making from its inception to the end of his life.


The architect and the landscape artist have to be wary to keep man and his abode from being an intrusion on the landscape, and the larger the house the greater is the skill needed to weld the sophistication of our growing elegance with the gracious simplicities of nature. When a man marries himself to the land, he needs to feel a touch of the same glamour with which he marries his wife, and that will make the growth of a comely home a romance.
***"Rosemary Farm" Roland Conklin Estate - Huntington, NY - Circa 1924***
SOME forty miles from New York, there is such a place called Rosemary Farm, a Long Island estate of several hundred acres where beautiful things have been happening during the past decade. There were hills and lakes and woods and sea to begin with, and on the place Mr. Roland Ray Conklin found a little preRevolutionary farm house, clinging to the highway, as homes did when men were so scarce that every touch of human contact was desired. Just enough modern comfort was added to this farm house to make a living place for his family, while Mr. Conklin built the long red brick residence which tops the loveliest of his hills, commanding the wondrous Cold Spring Harbor, which looks like a Norwegian fiord in the low light of afternoon. Directly opposite are the beguiling involutions of Oyster Bay, while to the right a great sweep of the waters of the Sound meet the Connecticut Hills weaving into a blue horizon. From the living rooms and the terrace the pageant of the sunset crowns the day, while twilight comes first in the great cedars which sentinel the Open-Air Theatre set within a cleft between the house and the sea.
***Open-Air Theatre - "Rosemary Farm"  Roland Conklin Estate***   
This theatre is perhaps the keynote of Rosemary, for the host finds even his big house so inadequate to satisfy his joy in sharing his acres, that he has built for the use of America this lovely amphitheater, which accommodates itself so fraternally with the place that there is no sense of intrusion. It never looks empty, and even at midnight, when Pelleas and Melisande, its two guardian swans, abandon their vigil in sleep, you can almost see Pan leave his stony base and call his people from the woods beyond the stage.


Brooding over the amphitheatre is a balustraded terrace, and beyond that the water front of the house, mellow with soft bricks and huge, adzed oak timbers. Numerous sleeping porches cling to its sides, without destroying the vigorous simplicity of its lines. The garden front has a more intimate overhanging quality, the great roof line in the center sweeping down to the mezzanine floor supported by carved caryatides. Vines have climbed to the gable tops, and the hedges are now man high. 
WHITE MARBLE DOORWAY BROUGHT OVER FROM ITALY SETS THE TONE FOR THE LUXURIANCE OF THE INSIDE OF THE HOUSE: WROUGHT IRON GATES AND CARVING OVER THE DOORWAY ARE UNUSUALLY FINE.
The hospitable front door has a way of standing open even after Jack Frost pushes his way in, and through the reception hall comes the glow of immense logs whenever there is the slightest excuse to keep the hearth fires burning. The visitor gets an instant impression of dignity, beauty and homelikeness, but there is still another joy for the trained eye, which welcomes the realization that the ornament is constructive, not applied. 
THE HALL AT ROSEMARY FARM WITH THE ORGAN IN THE DISTANCE: THE SPACE MADE BEAUTIFUL WITH RARE SPANISH ANTIQUE FURNITURE AND  RICH  POLYCHROME  LIGHTING FIXTURES.
The carved figures on the arches and the stairway are part of the structural beams, and as one glances through the rooms, opening one from another, one realizes that all the richness expresses something inherent.
A CLOSE VIEW OF THE ORGAN IN ONE END OF THE LIBRARYAT ROSEMARY FARM.
The living hall has a fine organ whose golden pipes blend with the dim, mysterious gorgeousness of the Panels of the Wise Men which line the walls. This organ once cast an aureate(gold) glow over the choir of an old Portuguese church. The room is lit by a lovely old metal lampidere colored in polychrome, which used to carry little lamps of oil above a high altar.


There is an Hispano-Moresque Cabinet of walnut, ivory and gold, chairs from an old Venetian palace, Russian brass, and other lares from far lands, which nevertheless blend so unobtrusively and quietly that they do not call the eye until after a full realization of the comfort and welcome of the room. 
A LIBRARY IN THE CONKLIN HOME ON LONG ISLAND N. Y. - DESIGNED AND EXECUTED UNDER THE HOGGSON BUILDING METHOD.
Beyond is the library, where upon the ceiling is woven a cunning design of arabesques, in the middle of each the symbol of one of the ancient formlers whose press assisted in the evolution of books.
ROOM OF THE ROLAND CONKLIN HOUSE, REMODELLED BY HOGGSON BROTHERS. FURNISHED WITH SPANISH LEATHER CHEST, CARVED  CABINETS  AND QUEEN  ANNE CHAIRS.
In the owner's study are many beautiful specimens of bindings from the Kelmscott and Dove presses. Toward the east is the music room, panelled in grey and hung in soft blue. This room is also a theatre, having stage curtain and footlights. Beyond is the conservatory, paned in Welsh quarries and banked on three sides with masses of blooming plants, which change from month to month in color and form. On the fourth side is a tile-lined pool with mosses and ferns banked above it.
THE FIREPLACE IN THE DINING ROOM AT ROSEMARY FARM.
On the western side of the house are the dining room and breakfast room, the former with an impressive old Italian mantel, tapestries, and chairs made from the choir stalls of a Mediaeval French church. Twisted Venetian columns divide this from the breakfast room; through a hexagon of glass is seen the beauties of the waterways and the distant shores of lovely contour.


The circular dining table has a magic quality of growth, for the number of diners at this elastic board is generally an unknown quantity, since motorists dropping in for a five minute call have a way of still being there the following morning for breakfast. All the impediments you have left at home appear waiting for you in your room, and so friendly is this stately house that you conclude it matters little what you wear. If you are fortunate you may happen upon a Rosemary dinner, which means a meal provided entirely by the host, if we conscientiously exclude the salt. Oysters and clams grow on his shores, bread comes from his fields, fish from the bay, meat and game from his flocks, mushrooms, vegetables and fruits from his farm, sugar from his Cuban plantation, cream from his herds, and wine and liquors from his vineyards. There is even a Rosemary cocktail containing a sprig of Rosemary, and of a secret brew we none of us know, and lastly nut trees in a sheltered ravine, coaxed and sheltered to feel themselves near the tropics.

A FLEMISH BED IN MASTER'S BEDROOM WITH RARE LACE COUNTERPANE BROUGHT FROM THE OLD WORLD AND A LANTERN BROUGIIT OVER FROM AN OLD WORLD CASTLE.
I remember seeing at Rosemary the full rose-tinted cups of seven thousand peach tree blossoms each holding in its corolla a rounded mound of snow. There were gray clouds, and gray stems to make an exquisite background for this Chinese acquerella, shimmering and silvery and roseate, but September saw very few peaches.


There is much still to be done at Rosemary, its owner has great dreams and plans for coaxing it to develop further allurements, but it has already achieved that entrancing quality - atmosphere. This is a place you do not forget, a haven well named, "Rosemary, that's for remembrance."


Vacant for many years house burned on December 27, 1990. Click HERE to see remains of "Rosemary Farm" at wikimapia. Follow additional links to Bing Maps and Historic Aerials from 1953 showing house still standing.  


Learn more about Roland Conklin and "Rosemary Farm" by visiting oldlonisland.com. Find-A-Grave site for Roland Ray Conklin.


The Hoggson Building Method.

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

"Preston Hall"

AKA "Martin Hall"


Originally built for James E. Martin Sr.(executive at Standard Oil). Designed by Little & O'Connor c. 1900. After the death of Mr. Martin in 1908 his widow Florence remarried Dr. Preston Pope Satterwhite. The Satterwhite's hired the Olmsted Brothers to landscape the grounds between 1915-18. Mr. Satterwhite remained in the house following the death of Florence in 1927 until a short circuit in the organ caused a large fire in 1932, burning the house to the ground. Click HERE to read details of will for Mr Martin.

"Preston Hall" - Time frame between 1915-1918 when Olmsted Brothers redid landscaping. 




"Preston Hall" - Time frame between 1915-1918 when Olmsted Brothers redid landscaping.

The original "Martin Hall"






Below "Martin Hall's" playhouse - which still survives. Click HERE to see location at wikimapia.

"Martin Hall" - Playhouse - Photo courtesy of roving photog  JamesH.  


"Martin Hall" - Playhouse - Photo courtesy of roving photog  JamesH. 
Click HERE to see remnants of the Olmsted garden and house foundations at Historic Aerials c. 1954.

For more on "Martin Hall" visit oldlongisland.com and Mansion of the Gilded Age.

Friday, May 18, 2012

"Castle Hill" Italian Style



An Italian Renaissance Revival villa with stucco walls and red tiled roof designed by Shepley, Rutan and Coolidge(successor firm to Henry Hobsen Richardson) c.1910. Built for Richard T. Crane, Jr.(Crane Co.) on Castle Hill, the highest promontory overlooking the Atlantic Ocean near Ipswich, Massachusetts.  According to wikipedia his wife Florence felt that the mansion was cold and drafty, and made her displeasure known. Crane countered by promising that if she would give it ten years, he would replace it if she still insisted. She did! It was razed and replaced in 1928 with a 59-room Stuart-style mansion designed by architect David Adler.




Click HERE to see "Castle Hill" today at wikimapia.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

The Acropolis of Newport


''Beacon Rock'' dubbed the ''Acropolis of Newport'' was built in 1888-1891 for Edward Denison Morgan III (1854-1933) of New York shortly after his marriage to Elizabeth Mary (nee Moran) (1860-1948). The Beaux Arts-style villa overlooking Newport Harbor and Brenton Cove was designed by Stanford White of the architectural firm McKim, Mead, & White; the landscape architect was Frederick Law Olmstead. Marion Eppley (1883-1960) and his wife, Ethelberta Pyne (nee Russell) (1867-1952), bought ''Beacon Rock'' in 1921 and had the property renovated extensively before taking possession in 1922. Captain Eppley, a Princeton graduate who served in both World Wars, was a physical chemist and research scientist(The Eppley Foundation for ResearchMarion Eppley Wildlife Refuge). In 1951 the Eppleys sold the estate to acclaimed sculptor Felix de Weldon (1907-2003), who used the estate's carriage house as a studio for many years. Newport attorney Brian R. Cunha bought ''Beacon Rock'' in 1996 and as of 2012 still owned the property.

Below photos are from the 1930s.



Click HERE to see "Beacon Rock" at wikimapia.org.
Click HERE to see  Captain Eppley's  home in Oyster Bay, NY.