Top Cottage
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Top Cottage | |
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(U.S. National Historic Landmark) | |
Location: | Hyde Park, NY |
Nearest city: | Poughkeepsie |
Coordinates: | Coordinates: |
Built/Founded: | 1938-1939 |
Architect: | Henry Toombs and Franklin Delano Roosevelt |
Architectural style(s): | Dutch Colonial Revival |
Designated as NHL: | December 9, 1997[1] |
Added to NRHP: | December 9, 1997 |
NRHP Reference#: | 97001679 |
Governing body: | National Park Service |
Top Cottage, also known as Hill-Top Cottage, in Hyde Park, New York was a private retreat designed by and for Franklin D. Roosevelt.[2][3][4] Built in 1938 to 1939, during Roosevelt's second term as President of the United States, it was designed to accommodate his need for wheelchair accessibility. It was one of the earliest such buildings in the country, and the first significant building designed by a disabled person.[5]
Although it was meant as a retreat, FDR also received notable guests at the cottage, including Britain's King George VI and Queen Elizabeth. He had meant to retire there along with his cousin Margaret Suckley, who had helped him choose the site, but he died in office. His son sold it shortly after World War II, and after half a century in private ownership it was restored and given to the National Park Service, which today operates it as part of the nearby Home of Franklin D. Roosevelt National Historic Site. It was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1997.[1][6] Guided tours of the cottage are available from the main site.
This building is the only building designed by a sitting U.S. President other than Thomas Jefferson, who designed several at his home in Monticello, the University of Virginia, and the Virginia State Capitol.[7]
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[edit] Building and site
The cottage is in the Dutch Colonial Revival architectural style, built of fieldstone. It is one of several buildings in Hyde Park and surrounding communities which FDR ensured were built in that style, which he hoped to revive in the region. It is located at the end of Potters Bend Road, a residential street in a rural area of Hyde Park, at the top of the 500-foot (152 m) ridgetop unofficially known as Dutchess Hill. This hill was where Roosevelt had played as a child. [8] In FDR's time, it had commanding views of the Hudson River and the Catskill Mountains, now obscured by trees.[6]
[edit] History
In 1933, Roosevelt realized his family home in Hyde Park did not offer him sufficient distance from the pressures of the presidency. He realized he would need a more isolated retreat, "a small place to go to escape the mob..."[9]
At the time when houses cost $1,000, the cottage cost $16,599.[10] In the end, it is thought that FDR never spent a single night at the cottage.[11] Recent renovations to the cottage, allowing to open to the public, cost $1,500,000, including $750,000 to buy the cottage.[12]
Two years later, Roosevelt and his cousin Margaret Suckley spent some time together on the top of the hill, with a view over the Hudson River to the Catskill Mountains, and were both impressed by the possibilities.[13] He would refer to it as "Our Hill"[13]; she as "the nicest Hill in Dutchess County".[14] In October of that year he suggested it would be the perfect spot for "a one-story fieldstone two-room house ... one with very thick walls to protect us." She responded enthusiastically, with a sketch that looks similar to the finished building.[13]
Roosevelt at first envisioned it as where he would live after his presidency, and bought the 118-acre (47 ha) hillside parcel in 1937, after his re-election. By that point in his life, he was mostly confined to a wheelchair due to his polio-related paralysis and could only walk short distances with great difficulty and assistance,a fact he and others concealed from the public. He designed the cottage to accommodate the wheelchair, with one flat floor and everything he could want or need located within easy reach of someone in a sitting position. Top Cottage is the only presidential residence, other than Thomas Jefferson's Monticello and Poplar Forest, designed by a president. It is also the first accessible building designed by a disabled person.[15]
He began submitting sketches to architects in 1938.[16] He commissioned architect Henry Toombs to help finish the design, who suggested Roosevelt be credited as architect despite his lack of professional training or experience,[17] angering some Republican architects when an article about the cottage doing exactly that ran in Life magazine.[18] There are some indications that Toombs was the architect but suggested that he be listed only as the associate with Roosevelt being credited as the architect.[19] Crediting Roosevelt as the architect brought criticism from others, including John Lloyd Wright, son of architect Frank Lloyd Wright. Wright said, "awaited 'pictures of 'Doctor' Roosevelt performing an appendectomy.' :[20]
The next year it would be host to the famous picnic where Roosevelt cooked and served hot dogs to Britain's King George VI and Queen Elizabeth on the first state visit to the United States by a British sovereign.[9]
It was during the King and Queen's visit that Roosevelt broke protocol and proposed a toast to the Queen. She reportedly became flustered at the break in protocol and drank to herself.[21]
His original intention to use it as a retirement home were put on hold when he won an unprecedented third term the next year. But he continued to use Top Cottage as a retreat, bringing important visitors such as British Prime Minister Winston Churchill there to discuss the atomic bomb,[9] as well as close friends like Suckley, who took the only two published photos of him in his wheelchair on the cottage's porch.[13]
After Roosevelt's death, his son Elliott Roosevelt lived there for a while.[22] He made some renovations, such as adding dormer windows and a mud room. Later he sold the house to the Potter family, who gave their name to the street leading to the home. It remained in their possession until 1996, when it was sold again to the Open Space Institute (OSI). The following year it was recognized as a National Historic Landmark, and the OSI began renovations, removing Elliott Roosevelt's additions and thinning some of the trees that had obstructed the view. In 2001, it was turned over to the National Park Service to be made part of the existing historic site. The house was opened to the public for the first time in 2001.[23] It is used as a conference center, in addition to being open to the public.[24]
[edit] Previous residents of the cottage
Franklin Delano Roosevelt (January 30, 1882 – April 12, 1945), often referred to by his initials FDR, was the thirty-second President of the United States. Elected to four terms in office, he served from 1933 to 1945, and is the only U.S. president to have served more than two terms. He was a central figure of the 20th century during a time of worldwide economic crisis and world war.
During the Great Depression of the 1930s, Roosevelt created the New Deal to provide relief for the unemployed, recovery of the economy, and reform of the economic and banking systems. Although recovery of the economy was incomplete until almost 1940, many programs initiated in the Roosevelt administration continue to have instrumental roles in the nation's commerce, such as the FDIC, TVA, and the SEC. One of his most important legacies is the Social Security system.
Roosevelt won four presidential elections in a row, causing a realignment that political scientists call the Fifth Party System. His aggressive use of an active federal government re-energized the Democratic Party, creating a New Deal Coalition which dominated American politics until the late 1960s. He and his wife, Eleanor Roosevelt, remain touchstones for modern American liberalism. Conservatives vehemently fought back, but Roosevelt usually prevailed until he tried to pack the Supreme Court in 1937. Thereafter, the new Conservative coalition successfully ended New Deal expansion; during the war it closed most relief programs like the WPA and Civilian Conservation Corps, arguing that unemployment had disappeared.
After 1938, Roosevelt championed re-armament and led the nation away from isolationism as the world headed into World War II. He provided extensive support to Winston Churchill and the British war effort before the attack on Pearl Harbor pulled the U.S. into the fighting. During the war, Roosevelt, working closely with his aide Harry Hopkins, provided decisive leadership against Nazi Germany and made the United States the principal arms supplier and financier of the Allies who later, alongside the United States, defeated Germany, Italy and Japan. Roosevelt led the United States as it became the Arsenal of Democracy and put 16 million American men into uniform.
On the homefront his term saw the vast expansion of industry, the achievement of full employment, restoration of prosperity and new opportunities opened for African-Americans and women. Also with his term came new taxes that affected all income groups, price controls and rationing, and relocation camps for 120,000 Japanese and Japanese-Americans as well as thousands of Italian and German-Americans. As the Allies neared victory, Roosevelt played a critical role in shaping the post-war world, particularly through the Yalta Conference and the creation of the United Nations. Roosevelt's administration redefined liberalism for subsequent generations and realigned the Democratic Party based on his New Deal coalition of labor unions; farmers; ethnic, religious and racial minorities; intellectuals;[citation needed] the South; big city machines; and the poor and workers on relief.
Elliott Roosevelt (September 23, 1910 – October 27, 1990) was a World War II hero and an author. He was also the son of President Roosevelt and his wife Eleanor.
Elliott was involved in many different careers during his life, including a Texas radio station owner, a rancher, and for a term in the 1960s as the mayor of Miami Beach, Florida. As Elliott approached his 80th year of age, his final ambition was to "outlive James." However, Elliott Roosevelt died at the age 80 of congestive heart failure. His brother James Roosevelt survived Elliott by one year.
[edit] Location and further information
The cottage is located in New Hyde Park, New York. It is open only to those with reservations.[25][26] The house is currently unfurnished as the original contents have been long lost.[27] However, the cottage is being refurnished with furnishing used by Roosevelt.[28]
The cottage was subject of a review book, The President as Architect: Franklin D. Roosevelt's Top Cottage, was compiled by John G. Waite Associates, an Albany architectural firm specializing in restorations. [29]
[edit] References
- ^ a b Top Cottage. National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service (2007-09-07).
- ^ Top Cottage was FDR's hideaway
- ^ A Pied-à-Terre Designed By a President; F. D. R. Never Slept Here, But Entertained Dignitaries And Enjoyed Rendezvous - New York Times
- ^ Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum - Dutchess County Stone Buildings
- ^ A Pied-à-Terre Designed By a President; F. D. R. Never Slept Here, But Entertained Dignitaries And Enjoyed Rendezvous - New York Times
- ^ a b John F. Sears (July 1, 1997), National Historic Landmark Nomination: Top CottagePDF (250 KiB), National Park Service and Accompanying 9 photos, exterior and interior, from 1996 and 1937-1939PDF (1.76 MiB)|title=National Historic Landmark Nomination|date=1997-07-01|publisher=National Park Service}}
- ^ A Pied-à-Terre Designed By a President; F. D. R. Never Slept Here, But Entertained Dignitaries And Enjoyed Rendezvous - New York Times
- ^ Top Cottage was FDR's hideaway
- ^ a b c Rothbaum, Rebecca. "Top Cottage was FDR's hideaway", Poughkeepsie Journal, August 4, 2002. Retrieved on 2007-12-07.
- ^ A Pied-à-Terre Designed By a President; F. D. R. Never Slept Here, But Entertained Dignitaries And Enjoyed Rendezvous - New York Times
- ^ A Pied-à-Terre Designed By a President; F. D. R. Never Slept Here, But Entertained Dignitaries And Enjoyed Rendezvous - New York Times
- ^ A Pied-à-Terre Designed By a President; F. D. R. Never Slept Here, But Entertained Dignitaries And Enjoyed Rendezvous - New York Times
- ^ a b c d Ireland, Barbara. "At the Home of F.D.R.'s Secret Friend", The New York Times, September 9, 2007. Retrieved on 2007-12-07.
- ^ Top Cottage. Retrieved on 2007-12-07.
- ^ Top Cottage. The Franklin & Eleanor Roosevelt Institute. Retrieved on 2007-12-07.
- ^ A Pied-à-Terre Designed By a President; F. D. R. Never Slept Here, But Entertained Dignitaries And Enjoyed Rendezvous - New York Times
- ^ Toombs, Henry. Henry Toombs Suggests FDR Should Be Listed As Architect For Top Cottage, With Reply. Disability History Museum. Retrieved on 2007-12-07.
- ^ Rhoads, William. "FDR left mark on nation — and area's buildings", Poughkeepsie Journal. Retrieved on 2007-12-08.
- ^ A Pied-à-Terre Designed By a President; F. D. R. Never Slept Here, But Entertained Dignitaries And Enjoyed Rendezvous - New York Times
- ^ A Pied-à-Terre Designed By a President; F. D. R. Never Slept Here, But Entertained Dignitaries And Enjoyed Rendezvous - New York Times
- ^ A Pied-à-Terre Designed By a President; F. D. R. Never Slept Here, But Entertained Dignitaries And Enjoyed Rendezvous - New York Times
- ^ A Pied-à-Terre Designed By a President; F. D. R. Never Slept Here, But Entertained Dignitaries And Enjoyed Rendezvous - New York Times
- ^ A Pied-à-Terre Designed By a President; F. D. R. Never Slept Here, But Entertained Dignitaries And Enjoyed Rendezvous - New York Times
- ^ A Pied-à-Terre Designed By a President; F. D. R. Never Slept Here, But Entertained Dignitaries And Enjoyed Rendezvous - New York Times
- ^ A Pied-à-Terre Designed By a President; F. D. R. Never Slept Here, But Entertained Dignitaries And Enjoyed Rendezvous - New York Times
- ^ FDR's Top Cottage - Hyde Park New York
- ^ A Pied-à-Terre Designed By a President; F. D. R. Never Slept Here, But Entertained Dignitaries And Enjoyed Rendezvous - New York Times
- ^ The Franklin & Eleanor Roosevelt Institute - Top Cottage
- ^ A Pied-à-Terre Designed By a President; F. D. R. Never Slept Here, But Entertained Dignitaries And Enjoyed Rendezvous - New York Times
[edit] External links
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