Leland Castle: Difference between revisions
m →External links: link |
R.SawyerIII (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
| name = Leland Castle |
| name = Leland Castle |
||
| nrhp_type = |
| nrhp_type = |
||
| image =Leland Castle, New Rochelle, NY ( |
| image = Leland Castle, New Rochelle, NY (Front View).JPG |
||
| caption = |
| caption = |
||
| location= 29 Castle Pl., [[New Rochelle, New York]] |
| location= 29 Castle Pl., [[New Rochelle, New York]] |
||
Line 15: | Line 15: | ||
| locmapin = New York |
| locmapin = New York |
||
| nearest_city = |
| nearest_city = |
||
|area={{convert|2.62|acre|m2}}<ref name=nrhptext/> |
| area={{convert|2.62|acre|m2}}<ref name=nrhptext/> |
||
| built = 1855 |
| built = 1855 |
||
| architect = William Thomas Beers |
| architect = William Thomas Beers |
||
Line 23: | Line 23: | ||
| refnum=76001291<ref name="nris">{{NRISref|2008a}}</ref> |
| refnum=76001291<ref name="nris">{{NRISref|2008a}}</ref> |
||
}} |
}} |
||
⚫ | '''Leland Castle''' (also known as '''Castle View''') |
||
⚫ | '''Leland Castle''' (also known as '''Castle View'''), constructed during the years in 1855 - 1859, was the [[Gothic revival]] country residence of [[Simeon Leland]], a wealthy [[New York City]] hotel proprietor. Mr. Leland began to assemble an estate as early as 1848, and in 1855 began the erection of this palatial sixty room mansion.<ref>[http://www.newrochelleny.com/193.asp New Rochelle History-Nineteenth Century]</ref> The home was designed by New York City [[architect]] [[William Thomas Beers]]. A north and south wing were added to the castle in 1899 and 1902 respectively.<ref name="nrhptext">{{cite web|author=M. Justin McKiernan and L.E. Gobrecht |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: "Castle View" / Leland Castle |url=http://www.oprhp.state.ny.us/hpimaging/hp_view.asp?GroupView=10556 |date=April 27, 1976 |accessdate=2008-02-13}} (includes map) and [http://www.oprhp.state.ny.us/hpimaging/hp_view.asp?GroupView=10529 ''Accompanying three photos, exterior and interior, from 1967, 1975, and 1970s'']</ref><ref>''Leland Castle, College of New Rochelle'' National Register of Historic Places designation report. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of the Interior/National Park Service, 1976</ref> |
||
⚫ | The building was added to the [[National Register of Historic Places]] in 1976 and the New York State Register in 1980.<ref name=nris/><ref>[http://www.westchestergov.com/planning/Design/StateNatlRegisters.htm Inventory of Historic Places]</ref><ref>[http://www.nationalregisterofhistoricplaces.com/NY/Westchester/state2.html National Register of Historic Places]</ref> |
||
⚫ | Leland Castle and the surrounding property have since been incorporated as part of the campus of the [[College of New Rochelle]]. <ref>[http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D05EEDA123EF932A15756C0A9609C8B63&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=all MUSEUMS;Art Studies Without the Homework], The New York Times, 2006</ref> The building was added to the [[National Register of Historic Places]] in 1976 and the New York State Register in 1980.<ref name=nris/><ref>[http://www.westchestergov.com/planning/Design/StateNatlRegisters.htm Inventory of Historic Places]</ref><ref>[http://www.nationalregisterofhistoricplaces.com/NY/Westchester/state2.html National Register of Historic Places]</ref> |
||
==History== |
|||
After Simeon Leland died in 1872, Mrs. Leland continued to live in the castle until 1880. In that year the castle's new owner, the [[Manhattan Life Insurance Company]], leased the castle as a clubhouse for the Queens County Hunt Club. It later became a girls' school, and after a fire in 1897 it was sold to the [[Ursulines|Ursuline Sisters]].<ref name="nrhptext" /> The Castle housed the college's library until 1939, when it moved to its own building as the [[Mother Irene Gill Memorial Library]]. |
|||
==Architecture== |
|||
⚫ | The castle currently houses the administrative offices of the College of New Rochelle and the college's Castle Art Gallery. <ref>[http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D05EEDA123EF932A15756C0A9609C8B63&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=all MUSEUMS;Art Studies Without the Homework], The New York Times, 2006</ref> |
||
The main structure is a two and a half story, Gothic Revival home constructed of coarse [[granite]] stone. The exterior is enhanced on the southeast corner by a tall square [[tower]], by an hexagonal tower on the northeast, and a round tower on the northwest. The main entrance on the eastern facade is framed by a Gothic pointed arch. Tall, black [[walnut]] doors ornamented with lion's heads are flanked by slender sidelights crowned with Gothic details. All windows are decorated with Gothic tracery and topped with heavily molded labels. As late as 1890 a wooden [[porte cochere]] with an open balcony above it stood before the main entrance. Two wooden [[veranda]]s also opened out from the original building, as did a [[greenhouse]] on the south end. All these had disappeared before 1900. The greenhouse was replaced by a veranda, which in turn was replaced in 1897 by a room that followed the outlines of the original greenhouse.<ref name=nrhptext/> |
|||
The entrance hall features walnut paneling and a blue and gold Minton tiled floor. The gothic style library contains a bay window with stained and etched glass borders, original interior shutters and bookcases, and one of the three original [[fireplace]]s in the mansion. Some of the first floor rooms are in the Renaissance style, with round arched doorways. The music room arches are crowned with [[rococo]] crests bearing busts of English sovereigns. In the dining room, a Renaissance style [[sideboard]] and [[mantel]], originally designed for this room, contrast with the Gothic diamond paned windows with etched, amber colored, stained glass borders. The sliding doors between the dining and drawing rooms retain their panels of etched glass.<ref name=nrhptext/> |
|||
In 1902, a large wing was built onto the north side adjoining the former billiard room and picture gallery extension followed the Gothic style of the original castle. The attic rooms have been subdivided, and a small chapel was installed in a former bedroom on the second floor. In 1926, the wooden parapet of the rear north tower was destroyed by lightning. During the middle part of the twentieth century, the wooden gables, turrets and crenellations over the bay windows were replaced by galvanized iron copies.<ref name=nrhptext/> |
|||
In 1974 an interior staircase was installed in the square tower. The castle has three multi-flue chimneys which were originally used to heat the interior. The ornate fixtures of the original gas lighting system remain throughout. A [[chapel]], not original to the building, is attached to the south elevation and a dormitory wing, with a larger chapel which was added in 1902. <ref>Sister Martha Counihan O.S.U. "Simeon Leland's Castle at New Rochelle." Unpublished Masters Thesis. University of Delaware. 1973</ref> |
|||
==Historical background== |
|||
In 1848, Leland purchased a forty-acre site in New Rochelle overlooking [[Long Island Sound]]. Like many successful New York businessmen, he took advantage of the railroads development into the rural areas around New York and carefully planned a suburban enclave designed for graceful and stylish living. Famous for his well run and fashionable [[Metropolitan Hotel (New York City)|Metropolitan Hotel]] in New York's [[Broadway theatre|theatre district]], Leland's home became equally famous as he entertained there regularly. <ref>"The Leland Palace", 'Frank Leslie's Illustrated Weekly'; October 21, 1865</ref> |
|||
Leland retired in 1872 when his lease on the Metropolitan Hotel expired and was given to [[William M. Tweed|"Boss William A. Tweed"]]. He died later that same year deeply in debt and the mortgage on Castleview was foreclosed. <ref>[http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=F50B1FFB355C1A7493C4A91783D85F468784F9 Obituary]</ref> The castle's new owner, the 'Manhattan Life Insurance Company', allowed Mrs. Leland and her children to continue living there until 1880. The home was then leased by the "''Queens County Hunt Club''" for use as an [[inn]] and thus became known as "''Castle Inn''" for two years.<ref name=nrhptext/> |
|||
In 1884, Adrian Iselin, Jr., a member of one of the 'Hunt Club' families from [[Davenport Neck (New York)|Davenport Neck]], purchased the Castle and its surrounding acreage for the purpose of developing the land into a residential park. He paved surrounding streets, including Castle Place, put in gas lines and planted many trees, and soon the 40-acre original estate was diminished to just 2 1⁄2 acres, as Iselin’s [[List of New Rochelle neighborhoods|Residence Park]] came to occupy much of the former grounds of Leland’s estate.<ref>Sister Martha Counihan O.S.U. "Simeon Leland's Castle at New |
|||
Rochelle." Unpublished Masters Thesis. University of Delaware. 1973</ref> |
|||
The castle temporarily housed the "''New Rochelle Collegiate Institute''", a [[boarding school]] for young boys, from 1889 - 1892, and later to "''Miss Morse’s Academy''" for young ladies. In 1897 the Castle was further damaged by a fire that broke out in the [[chimney]] and caused extensive damage to the roof, plaster and second floor woodwork. Uninsured, Miss Morse was forced to leave the Castle, and, with the promise by Iselin of repairs to the smoke and water damage, it was then purchased by Mother Irene Gill for her Ursuline Seminary.<ref>Sister Martha Counihan O.S.U. "Simeon Leland's Castle at New Rochelle." Unpublished Masters Thesis. University of Delaware. 1973</ref> |
|||
Today the residence survives in a suburban area more densely settled than the original grand country estate, and serves as a symbol of the fashion, taste and life style that Americans idealized in the latter part of the nineteenth century. It is also the only surviving example of the work of William Thomas Beers. |
|||
⚫ | The castle currently houses the administrative offices of the [[College of New Rochelle]] and the college's "Castle Art Gallery". <ref>[http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D05EEDA123EF932A15756C0A9609C8B63&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=all MUSEUMS;Art Studies Without the Homework], The New York Times, 2006</ref> |
||
==Image gallery== |
|||
<center><gallery> |
|||
Leland Castle, New Rochelle, NY (Rear View Courtyard).JPG|Rear view courtyard |
|||
</gallery></center> |
|||
==References== |
==References== |
||
{{reflist}} |
{{reflist}} |
||
==See also== |
|||
* [[National Register of Historic Places listings in New Rochelle, New York]] |
|||
* [[New Rochelle Historic Sites]] |
|||
==External links== |
==External links== |
||
* [http://castlegallery.cnr.edu/the-galleries/the-castle-gallery/ Castle Gallery website] |
|||
* [http://www.cr.nps.gov/NR/ National Register of Historic Places] |
* [http://www.cr.nps.gov/NR/ National Register of Historic Places] |
||
* [http://tourism.westchestergov.com/attractionsK/TourismDetailRecord2New.asp?lngOrgID=1190&strC Westchester County Tourism website] |
* [http://tourism.westchestergov.com/attractionsK/TourismDetailRecord2New.asp?lngOrgID=1190&strC Westchester County Tourism website] |
||
Line 43: | Line 71: | ||
{{New Rochelle, New York|collapsed}} |
{{New Rochelle, New York|collapsed}} |
||
[[Category: |
[[Category:New Rochelle, New York]] |
||
[[Category:Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in New York]] |
[[Category:Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in New York]] |
||
[[Category:Gothic Revival architecture in New York]] |
[[Category:Gothic Revival architecture in New York]] |
Revision as of 15:21, 14 February 2015
Leland Castle | |
Location | 29 Castle Pl., New Rochelle, New York |
---|---|
Area | 2.62 acres (10,600 m2)[2] |
Built | 1855 |
Architect | William Thomas Beers |
Architectural style | Gothic Revival |
NRHP reference No. | 76001291[1] |
Added to NRHP | August 27, 1976 |
Leland Castle (also known as Castle View), constructed during the years in 1855 - 1859, was the Gothic revival country residence of Simeon Leland, a wealthy New York City hotel proprietor. Mr. Leland began to assemble an estate as early as 1848, and in 1855 began the erection of this palatial sixty room mansion.[3] The home was designed by New York City architect William Thomas Beers. A north and south wing were added to the castle in 1899 and 1902 respectively.[2][4]
Leland Castle and the surrounding property have since been incorporated as part of the campus of the College of New Rochelle. [5] The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1976 and the New York State Register in 1980.[1][6][7]
Architecture
The main structure is a two and a half story, Gothic Revival home constructed of coarse granite stone. The exterior is enhanced on the southeast corner by a tall square tower, by an hexagonal tower on the northeast, and a round tower on the northwest. The main entrance on the eastern facade is framed by a Gothic pointed arch. Tall, black walnut doors ornamented with lion's heads are flanked by slender sidelights crowned with Gothic details. All windows are decorated with Gothic tracery and topped with heavily molded labels. As late as 1890 a wooden porte cochere with an open balcony above it stood before the main entrance. Two wooden verandas also opened out from the original building, as did a greenhouse on the south end. All these had disappeared before 1900. The greenhouse was replaced by a veranda, which in turn was replaced in 1897 by a room that followed the outlines of the original greenhouse.[2]
The entrance hall features walnut paneling and a blue and gold Minton tiled floor. The gothic style library contains a bay window with stained and etched glass borders, original interior shutters and bookcases, and one of the three original fireplaces in the mansion. Some of the first floor rooms are in the Renaissance style, with round arched doorways. The music room arches are crowned with rococo crests bearing busts of English sovereigns. In the dining room, a Renaissance style sideboard and mantel, originally designed for this room, contrast with the Gothic diamond paned windows with etched, amber colored, stained glass borders. The sliding doors between the dining and drawing rooms retain their panels of etched glass.[2]
In 1902, a large wing was built onto the north side adjoining the former billiard room and picture gallery extension followed the Gothic style of the original castle. The attic rooms have been subdivided, and a small chapel was installed in a former bedroom on the second floor. In 1926, the wooden parapet of the rear north tower was destroyed by lightning. During the middle part of the twentieth century, the wooden gables, turrets and crenellations over the bay windows were replaced by galvanized iron copies.[2]
In 1974 an interior staircase was installed in the square tower. The castle has three multi-flue chimneys which were originally used to heat the interior. The ornate fixtures of the original gas lighting system remain throughout. A chapel, not original to the building, is attached to the south elevation and a dormitory wing, with a larger chapel which was added in 1902. [8]
Historical background
In 1848, Leland purchased a forty-acre site in New Rochelle overlooking Long Island Sound. Like many successful New York businessmen, he took advantage of the railroads development into the rural areas around New York and carefully planned a suburban enclave designed for graceful and stylish living. Famous for his well run and fashionable Metropolitan Hotel in New York's theatre district, Leland's home became equally famous as he entertained there regularly. [9]
Leland retired in 1872 when his lease on the Metropolitan Hotel expired and was given to "Boss William A. Tweed". He died later that same year deeply in debt and the mortgage on Castleview was foreclosed. [10] The castle's new owner, the 'Manhattan Life Insurance Company', allowed Mrs. Leland and her children to continue living there until 1880. The home was then leased by the "Queens County Hunt Club" for use as an inn and thus became known as "Castle Inn" for two years.[2]
In 1884, Adrian Iselin, Jr., a member of one of the 'Hunt Club' families from Davenport Neck, purchased the Castle and its surrounding acreage for the purpose of developing the land into a residential park. He paved surrounding streets, including Castle Place, put in gas lines and planted many trees, and soon the 40-acre original estate was diminished to just 2 1⁄2 acres, as Iselin’s Residence Park came to occupy much of the former grounds of Leland’s estate.[11]
The castle temporarily housed the "New Rochelle Collegiate Institute", a boarding school for young boys, from 1889 - 1892, and later to "Miss Morse’s Academy" for young ladies. In 1897 the Castle was further damaged by a fire that broke out in the chimney and caused extensive damage to the roof, plaster and second floor woodwork. Uninsured, Miss Morse was forced to leave the Castle, and, with the promise by Iselin of repairs to the smoke and water damage, it was then purchased by Mother Irene Gill for her Ursuline Seminary.[12]
Today the residence survives in a suburban area more densely settled than the original grand country estate, and serves as a symbol of the fashion, taste and life style that Americans idealized in the latter part of the nineteenth century. It is also the only surviving example of the work of William Thomas Beers.
The castle currently houses the administrative offices of the College of New Rochelle and the college's "Castle Art Gallery". [13]
Image gallery
-
Rear view courtyard
References
- ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 15, 2008.
- ^ a b c d e f M. Justin McKiernan and L.E. Gobrecht (April 27, 1976). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: "Castle View" / Leland Castle". Retrieved 2008-02-13. (includes map) and Accompanying three photos, exterior and interior, from 1967, 1975, and 1970s
- ^ New Rochelle History-Nineteenth Century
- ^ Leland Castle, College of New Rochelle National Register of Historic Places designation report. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of the Interior/National Park Service, 1976
- ^ MUSEUMS;Art Studies Without the Homework, The New York Times, 2006
- ^ Inventory of Historic Places
- ^ National Register of Historic Places
- ^ Sister Martha Counihan O.S.U. "Simeon Leland's Castle at New Rochelle." Unpublished Masters Thesis. University of Delaware. 1973
- ^ "The Leland Palace", 'Frank Leslie's Illustrated Weekly'; October 21, 1865
- ^ Obituary
- ^ Sister Martha Counihan O.S.U. "Simeon Leland's Castle at New Rochelle." Unpublished Masters Thesis. University of Delaware. 1973
- ^ Sister Martha Counihan O.S.U. "Simeon Leland's Castle at New Rochelle." Unpublished Masters Thesis. University of Delaware. 1973
- ^ MUSEUMS;Art Studies Without the Homework, The New York Times, 2006