The Breakers
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The Breakers | |
The Breakers as seen from the lawn leading down to the sea |
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Building Information | |
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Name | The Breakers |
Location | Newport, Rhode Island |
Country | United States |
Architect | Richard Morris Hunt |
Client | Cornelius Vanderbilt |
Construction Start Date | 1893 |
Completion Date | 1895 |
Cost | $7 million |
Style | Italianate |
- This article is about The Breakers (the mansion in Newport, Rhode Island). For other uses, see Breakers (disambiguation).
The Breakers is located on Ochre Point Avenue, Newport, Rhode Island, on the Atlantic Ocean. ( ). It is a National Historic Landmark, and is owned and operated by the Preservation Society of Newport County.
The Breakers is a Vanderbilt mansion, built as the Newport summer home of Cornelius Vanderbilt II, a member of the wealthy United States Vanderbilt family. Designed by renowned architect Richard Morris Hunt and with interior decoration by Jules Allard and Sons and Ogden Codman, Jr., the 70-room mansion was constructed between 1893 and 1895 at the then-astronomical cost of more than seven million dollars. The Ochre Point Avenue entrance is marked by sculpted iron gates and 30-foot high walkway gates are part of a twelve-foot-high limestone and iron fence that borders the property on all but the ocean side. The 250' x 150' dimensions of the five-story mansion are aligned symmetrically around a central Great Hall.
Part of a 13-acre (53,000 m²) estate on the seagirt cliffs of Newport, it sits in a commanding position that faces east overlooking the Atlantic Ocean.
Contents |
[edit] History
As the previous mansion on the property owned by Pierre Lorillard IV burned down in 1892, Cornelius Vanderbilt II insisted that the building be made as fireproof as possible and as such, the structure of the building used steel trusses and no wooden parts. The designers created an interior using marble imported from Italy and Africa plus rare woods and mosaics from countries around the world. It also included entire rooms purchased from great chateaux in France.
"The Breakers" is the architectural and social archetype of the "Gilded Age", a period when members of the Vanderbilt family were among the most prominent industrialists of America. Indeed, "if the Gilded Age were to be summed up by a single house, that house would have to be The Breakers"[1]. In the year of its completion in 1895, The Breakers was the largest, most opulent house in a summer resort considered the social capital of America.
Vanderbilt died from a cerebral hemorrage caused from a second stroke in 1899 at the age of 56, leaving the Breakers to his wife, Alice Gwynne Vanderbilt. She outlived her husband by 35 years and died at the age of 89 in 1934. In her will, The Breakers was given to her youngest daughter Gladys essentially because Gladys lacked American property.
In 1948 Countess Gladys Széchenyi (1886-1965), the youngest daughter of Cornelius Vanderbilt II, leased the high-maintenance property to the non-profit Preservation Society of Newport County for $1 a year. The Society bought the Breakers outright in 1972 for $365,000 from Countess Sylvia Szapary, the daughter of Gladys. However, the agreement with the Society allows the family to continue to live on the third floor, which is not open to the public. Countess Sylvia lived there part time until her death in 1998. Gladys and Paul Szapary, Sylvia's children, summer there to this day, hidden from the hundreds of thousands of tourists who explore below.
Although the mansion is owned by the Society, the original furnishings displayed throughout the house are still owned by the family.
It is now the most-visited attraction in Rhode Island and is open year-round for tours.
[edit] Gardens
The pea-gravel driveway is lined with maturing pin oaks and red maples. The formally landscaped terrace is surrounded by Japanese yew, Chinese juniper, and dwarf hemlock. The trees of The Breakers' grounds act as screens that increase the sense of distance between The Breakers and its Newport neighbors. Among the more unusual imported trees are two examples of the Blue Atlas Cedar, a native of North Africa. Clipped hedges of Japanese yew and Pfitzer juniper line the tree shaded foot paths that meander about the grounds. Informal plantings of arbor vitae, taxus, Chinese juniper, and dwarf hemlock provide attractive foregrounds for the walls that enclose the formally landscaped terrace. The grounds also contain several varieties of other rare trees, particularly copper and weeping beeches. These were hand-selected by James Bowditch, a forester based in the Boston area. Bowditch’s original pattern for the south parterre garden was determined from old photographs and laid out in pink and white alyssum and blue ageratum. The wide borders paralleling the wrought iron fence are planted with rhododendron, laurel, dogwoods, and many other flowering shrubs that effectively screen the grounds from street traffic and give the visitor a feeling of complete seclusion.
[edit] Layout
[edit] First Floor
- Entrance Foyer
- Gentlemen’s Reception Room
- Ladies’ Reception Room
- Great Hall (50 ft x 50ft) - Over each of the six doors which lead from the Great Hall are limestone figure groups celebrating humanity's progress in art, science, and industry: Galileo, representing science, Dante, representing literature, Apollo, representing the arts, Mercury, representing speed and commerce, Richard Morris Hunt, representing architecture and Karl Bitter, representing sculpture
- Main Staircase
- Arcade
- Library
- Music Room
- Morning Room
- Porch
- Lower Loggia
- Upper Loggia
- Billiard Room
- Dining Room
- Marriage Chest
- Breakfast Room
- Pantry
- Kitchen
[edit] Second Floor
- Mr. Vanderbilt’s Bedroom
- Mrs. Vanderbilt’s Bedroom
- Miss Gertrude Vanderbilt’s Bedroom
- Guest Bedroom
- Countess Szechenyi’s Bedroom
- There are also two other small bedrooms located on the second floor.
[edit] Third Floor
The third floor contains eight bedrooms and a sitting room decorated in Louis XVI style walnut paneling by Ogden Codman. This floor is currently the residence of Countess Anthony Szapary.
[edit] Attic Floor
The Attic floor contained more staff quarters, general storage areas, and the innovative cisterns.
[edit] The Architect
The Breakers is also the fullest expression of Beaux-Arts architecture in American domestic design by one of the founding fathers of architecture in America, Richard Morris Hunt. The Breakers is one of the few surviving works of Hunt that has not been demolished in the last century and is therefore valuable for its rarity as well as its architectural excellence. The Breakers was Hunt’s final work, and is the singular house that has withstood the vagaries of time to be remembered as the monument that was the architect’s greatest achievement. The Breakers made Hunt the "dean of American architecture" as well as defines the era in American life which Hunt helped to shape.
[edit] Materials
- Foundation: Brick, Concrete and Limestone
- Walls: Indiana Limestone
- Roof: Terra cotta Red Tile
- Wall Panels: Platinum leaf [2]
- Other: marble (plaques), wrought iron (gates & fences)
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Gannon, Thomas. Newport Mansions: the Gilded Age. Fort Church Publishers, Inc., 1982: p. 8.
- ^ http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2006/11/24/mansion_wall_panels_found_to_be_platinum/?p1=MEWell_Pos2
[edit] Bibliography
- Wilson, Richard Guy, Diane Pilgrim, and Richard N. Murray. American Renaissance 1876-1917. New York: The Brooklyn Museum, 1979.
- Baker, Paul R. Richard Morris Hunt. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 1980.
- Benway, Ann. A Guidebook to Newport Mansions. Preservation Society of Newport County, 1984.
- Croffut, William A. The Vanderbilts and the Story of their Fortune. Chicago and New York: Belford, Clarke and Company, 1886.
- Downing, Antoinette F. and Vincent J. Scully, Jr. The Architectural Heritage of Newport, Rhode Island. 2nd edition, New York: Clarkson N. Potter, Inc., 1967.
- Ferree, Barr. American Estates and Gardens. New York: Munn and Company, 1904.
- Gannon, Thomas. Newport Mansions: the Gilded Age. Fort Church Publishers, Inc., 1982.
- Jordy, William H., and Christopher P. Monkhouse. Buildings on Paper: Brown University, Rhode Island Historical Society and Rhode Island School of Design, 1982.
- Lints, Eric P. "The Breakers: A Construction and Technologies Report" Newport, RI: The Newport Preservation Society of Newport County, 1992.
- Metcalf, Pauline C., ed. Ogden Codman and the Decoration of Houses. Boston: The Boston Athenaeum, 1988.
- Patterson, Jerry E. The Vanderbilts. New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 1989.
- Perschler, Martin. "Historic Landscapes Project" Newport, RI: The Preservation Society of Newport County, 1993.
- Schuyler, Montgomery. "The Works of the Late Richard M. Hunt," The Architectural Record, Vol. V., October-December, 1895: p. 180.
- Smales, Holbert T. "The Breakers" Newport, Rhode Island. Newport, RI: Remington Ward, 1951.
- Thorndike, Joseph J., ed. Three Centuries of Notable American Architects. New York: American Heritage Publishing Co., Inc., 1981.
[edit] External links
- Complete details of the building, from the United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service (Adobe PDF file)
- Preservation Society of Newport County, owner and operator of the Breakers and other mansions in Newport, Rhode Island
Mansions of Newport, RI |
Preservation Society of Newport County
The Breakers | Chateau-sur-Mer | Chepstow | The Elms | Isaac Bell House | Kingscote | Marble House | Rosecliff |
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Not owned by the Preservation Society
The Astors' Beechwood | Belcourt Castle | Rough Point |
Categories: Wikipedia articles needing style editing | 1898 architecture | Houses in Rhode Island | Newport County, Rhode Island | Vanderbilt family | National Historic Landmarks of the United States | Italianate architecture | Registered Historic Places in Rhode Island | Landmarks in Rhode Island | Richard Morris Hunt buildings | Museums in Newport, Rhode Island