List of Gilded Age mansions
The so-called Gilded Age mansions were built in the United States in a short historic period spanning between the 1870s until about 1900.
Raised by the nation's industrial, financial and commercial elite who amassed great fortunes coinciding with an era of expansion of the railroads, steel and fossil fuels industries, economic, technical and scientific progress, and a complete lack of personal income tax. This made possible the very rich to build true "palaces" in some cases, designed by prominent architects of its day and decorated with antiquities, furnitures, collectibles and works of art, many imported from Europe.
This small group of nouveau riche, enterpreneur citizens of a relatively young country found context and meaning for their lives and good fortune by thinking of themselves as heirs of a great Western Tradition. They traced their cultural linage from the Greeks, through the Roman Empire, to the European Renaissance. America's upper classes and merchant classes traveled the world visiting the great European cities and the ancient sites of the Mediterranean, as part of a Grand Tour, collecting and honoring their western cultural heritage. In their travels abroad they also admired the estates of the European nobility and seeing themselves as the American "nobility", they wished to emulate the old world dwellings in American soil.
All these houses are "temples" of social ritual of the 19th-century high society, they are the result of the particularization of space, in that a sequence of rooms are separated and intended for a specific sort of activity, such as dining room for gala dinners, ballroom, library, etc.
These elaborate bastions of wealth and power played a social role, made for impressing, entertaining and receiving guests. Relatively few in number and geographically dispersed, the majority were constructed in a variety of European architectural and decorative styles from different times and countries, such as France, England or Italy.
In cinema, the Gilded Age society and mansions are accurately portrayed in Martin Scorsese's The Age of Innocence (1993), which was itself based on Edith Wharton's 1920 novel of the same name.
California
- Mark Hopkins mansion, 1878 (destroyed by fire following the 1906 San Francisco earthquake)
Florida
- White Hall, 1901
Illinois
- Nickerson House, 1883
Massachusetts
- Searles Castle, 1888
- Ventfort Hall, 1893
- The Mount, 1902
Minnesota
- James J. Hill House, 1891
New York
- Glenview, 1877
- Petit Chateau, 1882 (demolished)
- Cornelius Vanderbilt II House, 1883 (demolished)
- Woodlea, 1895
- Mrs. William B. Astor House, 1896 (demolished)
- Mills Mansion, remodelled and enlarged in 1895/96
- Indian Neck Hall, 1897
- Vanderbilt Mansion, 1899
- Andrew Carnegie Mansion, 1901
- Harbor Hill, 1902 (demolished)
North Carolina
- Biltmore, 1895
Pennsylvania
- Grey Towers, 1896
- Elstowe Manor, 1898
- Lynnewood Hall, 1900
Rhode Island
Newport
- Chateau-sur-Mer, remodelled and redecorated in the 1870s
- Marble House, 1892
- Ochre Court, 1892
- Rough Point, 1892
- Belcourt, 1894
- The Breakers, 1895
- The Elms, 1901
- Rosecliff, 1902
Washington, DC
- Townsend House, 1901
Wisconsin
- Pabst Mansion, 1892