Atwood-Blauvelt mansion

Atwood-Blauvelt mansion

The Atwood-Blauvelt mansion, photo c. 1909
Location within New Jersey
Former names Northland, Bluefield
General information
Architectural style Shingle style
Address 699 Kinderkamack Rd.
Town or city Oradell, New Jersey
Coordinates 40°57′51″N 74°01′55″W / 40.964175°N 74.031833°W
Construction started Fall 1896[1]
Opening June 1, 1897[1]
Client Kimball C. Atwood
Landlord CareOne LLC
Technical details
Floor count
Design and construction
Architect Fred W. Wentworth

The Atwood-Blauvelt mansion [1] is a historic residential building built in 1897 and home to the Hiram Blauvelt Art Museum. It is located on Kinderkamack Road in Oradell, Bergen County, New Jersey,[2] in the United States. The mansion is a prominent example of shingle style architecture, which was popular in the United States in the late 19th Century.[3] The Atwood-Blauvelt mansion takes its name from original owner, Kimball Chase Atwood, and from its second owner, Elmer Blauvelt who bought it in 1926.[4][5]

The 25-room[4] mansion is situated on a large plot of land and front by a two-acre sloped lawn that comes down to Kinderkamack Road.[5] Its location, prominent lawn, massive foundation, steeply pitched gable roof, and hexagonal towers with conical roofs make the mansion a landmark structure for the residents of the area.[5][2]

In 1941, the Bergen County Panorama described the mansion as “the most imposing home in the (Hackensack) valley, a 16-room replica of a Norman castle on the site of a 1700 Dutch colonial homestead torn down in 1892."[1]

History

Original owner Kimball Chase Atwood

Site

In the late 17th Century, the property was part of a 261-acre estate belonging to an early settler from the Low Countries, Andries Tebow, whose direct 10th generation descendant is former NFL quarterback Tim Tebow.[6]

In the years preceding the erection of the Atwood-Blauvelt mansion, the property on which it sits was owned by Richard and Euphemia Van Wagoner, and contained a Dutch Colonial house, built of sandstone, that predated the American Revolutionary War. The Van Wagoners sold the property to insurance company founder and grapefruit magnate Kimball Chase Atwood of Clifton, New Jersey on October 1, 1895.[1]

Atwood era

The Atwood-Blauvelt mansion was built during 1896-97 for Atwood, based on a design by Paterson, New Jersey architect Fred Wesley Wentworth (1864-1943).[1][2]

Atwood (1853-1934), who was raised in modest circumstances, founded the Preferred Mutual Accident Insurance Association in 1885, and in the 1890s established the largest grapefruit grove in the world at the time, on the Manatee River in Florida.[1][7] Atwood's grapefruit grove was the birthplace (1906) of the popular pink grapefruit variety.[8]

Atwood spent $100,000 on the construction of the mansion (not counting outbuildings and land improvements).[1] During the construction, The Hackensack Republican, a local newspaper, reported that Atwood's mansion "will be one of the grandest homes in northern New Jersey."[1] Atwood christened his new home Northland.[1]

Blauvelt era

Atwood sold the mansion in 1926[4] to Elmer Blauvelt, who renamed it Bluefield (which is the English meaning of "Blauvelt").[9][1]

Elmer Blauvelt (1866-1938)[10] and his son Hiram Bellis Demarest Blauvelt (1897-1957) had a coal and lumber business and were scions of the prominent Dutch Demarest and Blauvelt families, who have been living in Bergen County since the 17th Century.[11] Hiram Blauvelt served in Africa during World War II[11] and was a prolific hunter.[9] His collection of stuffed animals and wildlife-related art served as the foundation of the collection of the Hiram Blauvelt Art Museum and Foundation, which was established pursuant to his will in 1957 and is today located in the carriage house adjoining the mansion.[12]

After the deaths of Hiram Blauvelt (1957) and his mother Margaret Bellis Blauvelt (1961), the mansion was inhabited only by caretakers and was poorly maintained.[9] In 1978, the Blauvelt estate sold the mansion to architect Jeffrey Wells, who protected it from demolition and renovated it.[4][13]

Present state

Since 2006, the mansion had been listed for sale and at some point was in foreclosure.[2] The Wells family had experienced financial difficulties, and had asked Oradell to help rescue the mansion, which is costly to maintain.[13] On March 22, 2013 the mansion was sold in a sheriff's auction to CareOne LLC, who paid $100 and assumed $3.9m in mortgages on the property.[14] CareOne had been trying to build an assisted living facility since as early as 2007, with Wells's agreement, but its efforts met with opposition from the community and the Oradell Zoning Board.[14]

The preservation of the mansion remains uncertain.[2][13][14] While the mansion has been determined eligible for the New Jersey and National Registers of Historic Places, it has not been placed on either Register as of 2013.[2] Of the several outbuildings, only the carriage house survives. Since 1957 it has housed the Hiram Blauvelt Art Museum and Foundation.[2][12]

References