Searles Castle (Massachusetts)
Searles Castle | |
Location | 389 Main Street, Great Barrington, Massachusetts |
---|---|
Area | 64 acres (26 ha) |
Built | 1883 |
Architectural style | Renaissance, Other, Chateauesque |
NRHP reference No. | 82004953[1] |
Added to NRHP | April 15, 1982 |
The Searles Castle is a romantically imagined castle-style house in Great Barrington, Massachusetts. Built in the 1880s, and in the French chateau-style, it has seven stories and includes a "dungeon" basement. There are 40 rooms containing 54,246 square feet (5,039.6 m2) of floor space, as well as 36 fireplaces.
It was commissioned in 1888 by Mary Hopkins, widow of railroad millionaire Mark Hopkins. She married Edward Francis Searles, who had designed the interior, while the castle was being built. Hopkins died in 1891, but Searles maintained the castle until his death in 1920. After his death, the structure was used as a private girls' school for 30 years. It then passed through a variety of owners and uses, including as a storage area and conference center.
Since the mid-1980s it has housed John Dewey Academy, a school for troubled teens, which put the castle on the market in 2007 for $15 million.[2]
See also
References
External links
42°11′31″N 73°21′45″W / 42.19194°N 73.36250°W
- Great Barrington, Massachusetts
- Houses in Berkshire County, Massachusetts
- Castles in Massachusetts
- Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in Massachusetts
- National Register of Historic Places listings in Berkshire County, Massachusetts
- Gilded age
- Châteauesque architecture in the United States
- Massachusetts building and structure stubs
- Massachusetts Registered Historic Place stubs