Briarcliff Lodge

Briarcliff Lodge

Postcard illustration of a large Tudor Revival resort

Early 1900s postcard of the Briarcliff Lodge
General information
Status Demolished
Type Resort
Architectural style Tudor Revival
Address 25 Scarborough Road
Town or city Briarcliff Manor, New York
Country United States
Opened June 26, 1902
Destroyed January 16, 2004
Owner
Technical details
Floor count 4 (original and north wing)
7 (west wing)
Design and construction
Architect

Guy King (1902)
John Clark Udall (1907–09)

Location of the Briarcliff Lodge
Location of the Briarcliff Lodge
Location of the Briarcliff Lodge
Coordinates 41°08′53″N 73°50′23″W / 41.148111°N 73.839722°W / 41.148111; -73.839722Coordinates: 41°08′53″N 73°50′23″W / 41.148111°N 73.839722°W / 41.148111; -73.839722

The Briarcliff Lodge was a luxury resort in the village of Briarcliff Manor, New York. It was a notable example of Tudor Revival architecture, and was one of the largest wooden structures in the United States. It was also the first hotel in Westchester County.[1] Walter William Law had it built on his estate, and the Law family owned it until 1937. When the lodge opened in 1902, it was one of the largest resort hotels in the world. The lodge hosted presidents, royalty, and celebrities, and was the scene of numerous memorable occasions for visitors and local residents who attended weddings, receptions, and dances in the ballroom and dining room. For a long time, the lodge was situated among other businesses of Walter Law, including the Briarcliff Farms and Briarcliff Table Water Company.

In 1933, the lodge ended year-round service and housed a "health-diet sanitarium" until the Edgewood Park School for Girls began operation there from 1937 to 1954. From 1936 to 1939, the lodge was run again as a hotel in the summer months while the school was closed. From 1955 to 1994, The King's College used the lodge building and built dormitories and academic buildings. Abandoned and unmaintained after 1994, the Briarcliff Lodge was destroyed between 2003 and 2004.

History

Hotel

A large Tudor Revival resort
The lodge before its 1907 and 1909 additions

Walter Law hired Pennsylvania architect Guy King to construct the Briarcliff Lodge on the highest point of Law's estate. At its June 26, 1902 opening, the Tudor Revival-style building was a premier resort hotel with 93 rooms. The Olmsted Brothers, sons of the eminent landscape designer Frederick Law Olmsted, designed the lodge's surrounding grounds, including a large hillside landscape garden with shady walks, winding drives, green lawns, and flowers.[2](p378) In 1903, the lodge additionally began being used by Mary Elizabeth Dow as Mrs. Dow's School. Walter Law gave Dow a 35-acre (14 ha) property on Elm Road (later the site of Briarcliff College and then a Pace University campus).[3]

Pergola attached to a large Tudor building
Porch and porte-cochère of a Tudor building
Exteriors ca. 1907: south-facing pergola; porch and porte-cochère

In 1907, John Clark Udall oversaw construction of a north wing, increasing the number of rooms to 150. In 1909, Udall oversaw a 72-room seven-story west wing, further increasing the rooms to 221. In Germany, it was advertised in January 1909 that the management of the Briarcliff Lodge and its architect Guy King planned to construct the platform to launch and dock airships, to cost $100,000. The platform would extend over the whole roof, and the tracks for the airship launch would be on an incline 105 meters long. The plans also included the purchase of a searchlight to guide the airships.[4] A mooring mast for docking airships was constructed on top of the west wing, however no record exists of it having been used. The mooring mast nonetheless was the first built for docking airships.[3]

There were two sets of greenhouses near the property; one set behind Law's home produced decorations for Law's Briarcliff Farms, his house, the lodge, and workers' houses. The other set, the Pierson Greenhouses, were used for growing the American Beauty rose and rare carnations, producing between 5,000 and 8,000 per week. Foreman George Romaine first propagated the Briarcliff rose there. The lodge also ran an annual American Beauty carnival, with events including a golf tournament, water sports, moonlight bathing and night diving, a dinner dance, cinema program, and a concert.[5] During the lodge's service, carriage transportation was provided for guests from the Scarborough and Briarcliff Manor train stations to the lodge.[3]

The lodge had a large Roman-style pool; when it was built in 1912, it was the largest outdoor pool in the world[6] and was used for the 1924 Olympic trials.[7] The Briarcliff Lodge was noted for its cuisine (including Briarcliff dairy and table water), a golf course, fifteen tennis courts, a music room, theater, indoor swimming pool (measuring 30 by 70 feet, with a depth of 4 to 10 feet[3](p33)), casino, library, stable, repair shops and a fleet of Fiat automobiles.[8] The water tower at the property was constructed by the Chicago Bridge & Iron Company. The grounds were decorated with Japanese lanterns that Law had obtained from missionaries. The lodge had elevator service and electric lighting.[3] The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace held its National Conference on International Problems and Relations at the Briarcliff Lodge from May 10–14, 1926.[9]

The lodge burning and firetrucks parked outside
Briarcliff Manor and Pleasantville Fire Departments fighting the lodge fire

In 1923, a year before Walter Law's death, the Law family leased the lodge to Chauncey Depew Steele for 20 years. Under Steele's management, the lodge reached its prominence. The lodge also was opened to a wider variety of clientele, but continued to be known as a resort for the wealthy and famous. A 6,500-yard (5,900 m) 18-hole golf course was completed in 1923, designed by Devereux Emmet.[3] In May 1925, The New York Times reported that the Briarcliff Lodge installed the first artificial spa; using radioactive mineral torbernite to affect the water, believed to counter ailments associated with old age. United States Senators Chauncey Depew, James Wolcott Wadsworth, Jr., and Royal S. Copeland were to each place a bag containing the minerals into the lodge's swimming pool.[10] In June of that year, the newspaper mentioned in its report of an upcoming Briarcliff Lodge performance that the swimming pool was popular in the summer heat and that "the cool spring radioactive water gave considerable relief to several hundred guests".[11]

Postcard illustration of a highly decorated sitting room
Postcard illustration of a European-style household library
Postcard illustration of a wood-floor ballroom with Ionic columns
Postcards of interiors (from left to right): the Dutch room, based on a restaurant in Edam, with rough adze-hewn timbers, a hipped ceiling, etchings from England, and European and American oil paintings; the library, adjacent to and north of the large dining room; and the ballroom, with classical fluted Ionic columns and Italian marble walls. Thomas Edison was honored there in 1909.[3]

Decline and lease

The hotel declined during the 1930s. Walter Law's son Henry (also village mayor from 1918 to 1938) attributed the decline to the 1920-1933 prohibition of alcohol. Another factor was the increasing usage of automobiles, as guests would be less inclined to stay throughout the summer. Steele ended up surrendering his lease in 1933;[3] at the time the building was valued at $750,000 ($13.7 million in 2015[12]).[13] The lodge remained in use, housing a "health-diet sanitarium" until the Edgewood Park School for Girls, a nonsectarian Christian college- and occupational-preparatory school,[7](pp73-4) leased the property in 1936, and purchased it a year later; at the time the lodge was valued at $1,000,000 ($16.5 million in 2015[12]).[14] The lodge was run as a hotel in the summer months while the school was closed until 1939. The Edgewood Park School operated there until 1954.[3]

In September 1955, The New York Times reported that the lodge was being reopened as a 225-room resort; after being purchased by a partnership led by Emanuel Shapiro, counsel for then-New York Governor Thomas E. Dewey. It was assessed at $400,000 ($3.54 million in 2015[12]) at the time.[15]

College use, demolition, and current plans

From 1955 to 1994, The King's College, a strictly Fundamentalist coeducational liberal arts college,[16] relocated to the Briarcliff Lodge property. The school used the lodge building and built dormitories and academic buildings.[17][7] During that time, in 1985, the Lodge and the Briarcliff library were among 60 sites given historical markers by Westchester County Tricentennial Commission.[18] The New York State Board of Regents closed the school in 1994 due to financial difficulties and a deficiency of qualified faculty.[19] The original 1902 Briarcliff Lodge building burned to the ground on September 20, 2003 shortly before its scheduled demolition,[20] and contemporary portions of the lodge and other campus buildings were later demolished.[3]

Two-story houses beside a driveway
A grassy plateau and water tower
The Briarcliff Lodge site in 2014, with the Club's demonstration residence and offices

The site will be developed as the Club at Briarcliff Manor, what The New York Times has described as "a super-luxury retirement community", with up to $2 million entrance fees. The Club was scheduled to open in 2013 and include tennis courts, a health spa, a Tudor-style clubhouse, gardens, a surround-sound theater, hiking trails, an indoor pool, a business center, a cocktail lounge, and multiple restaurants. As of 2010, 65 people have put down deposits, although the Club is planned to include 325 residences, including thirteen houses, 24 townhouses, and 288 apartments. Briarcliff Manor's village government took about five years to grant zoning changes, and several more years to approve the site plan.[21]

The King's College football and soccer field was replaced (with a cost of $1,200,0000) and transferred to the village government around 2013. The water tower will be replaced with a hydro-pneumatic pump station (with a cost of $850,000).[22]

Architecture

Main building

Briarcliff Lodge, which is, in a sense, a hotel, although preserving all the architectural richness and artistic effect of a fine manor house on a thriving estate.

The New York Tribune [23]

The interior decorations of Briarcliff Lodge shows the taste of a man of a highly cultivated artistic temperament and the money necessary to gratify it.

The New York Tribune [23]

The Briarcliff Lodge was located on a 184-acre (74 ha) site on the highest point of Law's estate. The original wing was designed by Pennsylvania architect Guy King, on the highest point of Walter Law's estate, which was about 600 feet above sea level[2](p376)[23] and 29 miles (47 km) north of New York City.[23] The building's first floor exterior walls were constructed of stones from nearby forests, and Indiana limestone was used for trimmings. the second floor exterior walls were decorated with richly colored half timber and pebbledash. The roof had red shingles and tall red brick chimneys. The main facade of the building was two stories high, while the third and fourth floor had many gables and dormer windows present on the roof. The overall design of the building was in the Tudor Revival-style, and was described to be in "the fashion of the old English inns". The building was 307 feet (94 m) long and had 93 rooms. Each room had Colonial mahogany furniture, a long-distance telephone, concealed fire escape, electric lights, and suction ventilators. As well, each room had an exterior wall with a window.[2](p376)

In 1902, the hotel's first floor held its reception rooms, parlors, dining rooms, library, and a lounge area called the Dutch kitchen, which had decorations and furnishings from Holland. Furniture was purchased from Law's former employer W. & J. Sloane. Art and decorations throughout the building were largely were sourced from markets in Europe and Asia, and included expensive paintings, bronzes, marble sculptures, rare books, and carved antique furniture.[23] The hotel also had a Chinese tea room and a dark room for amateur photographers. The kitchen was kept clean (such that it was proposed to serve lunches in the kitchen). It was reported to be of elegant design, utilizing white tile and marble. The kitchen equipment was of white porcelain and aluminum, and included numerous glass-lined refrigerators. It sourced its milk, butter, eggs, and vegetables from Briarcliff Farms. The kitchen's trash was frozen to prevent odors before its eventual removal; the lodge also had an ice-producing plant that used sterilized well water.[2](p377)

John Clark Udall oversaw construction of the north wing in 1907, increasing the number of rooms to 150. In 1909, Udall oversaw a 72-room seven-story west wing, further increasing the rooms to 221.

Garage

The garage building

In its first operating year, a stable was built for the lodge, at the lodge's south driveway about 100 yards from Scarborough Road. In 1909 an addition was built (of 62 by 126 feet) and the entire structure became used for an automobile garage. The interior of the old stable was replaced. The east end held a commercial kitchen, dining room, and a billiard and smoking room. The west end held a repair shop. The front of the building held supply rooms, closets, and an office. The upstairs held bedrooms and bathrooms for the chauffeurs.[24]

Other buildings

Nearby the lodge was the amusement building, with a dance hall, swimming pool, bowling alley, squash court, and billiard room.[2](p377)

Notable guests

Two men sitting indoors
Thomas Edison and Charles Proteus Steinmetz in the library of the lodge during a meeting of the Edison Lighting Company

Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt were guests at the Briarcliff Lodge. In the early 1930s, Eleanor spoke there several times on behalf of the Women's Democratic Club of Mount Pleasant; her daughter Anna Roosevelt Halsted was chairwoman of the club at the time. In 1930, Franklin spoke there as New York Governor to the Westchester County Bankers Association.[3]

John W. Davis, US Representative and nominee for President against Calvin Coolidge, visited the lodge in 1924.[25] US Senator Chauncey Depew visited in 1924 and 1927.[26][27] Composer and pianist Percy Grainger gave a recital at the ballroom of the lodge in 1925.[28]

The final German emperor Wilhelm II's son Crown Prince Wilhelm was a guest at the Lodge for the 1909 Hudson-Fulton Celebration. He led a Prussian regiment in a parade of fifty floats held in honor of the celebration in New York.[29]

Other notable guests have included Thomas Edison, Tallulah Bankhead, Sarah Bernhardt, Boris Bakhmeteff, Johnny Weissmuller, Jimmy Walker, Babe Ruth, Edward S. Curtis,[30] George B. Cortelyou, Mary Pickford, F. W. Woolworth, J. P. Morgan,[31][32][33] Warner Baxter, Vincent Richards, and Ernestine Schumann-Heink.[34](p32) Elihu Root, Al Smith, and a king of Siam were guests at the lodge in the 1920s, and John Campbell frequently hosted parties there.[3]

Influences

A Tudor Revival train station with a horse and buggy
Southwest view of Law's train station in 1907

In 1906, Walter Law replaced the Briarcliff Manor railroad station and moved the original building to serve as Millwood's station. The new Briarcliff station, now part of the village library, was modeled in the style of his Briarcliff Lodge, and had Mission style furniture, rugs, and flowers decorating the interior.[3](p35) Central Briarcliff West is a neighborhood which has a number of mansions built by 20th-century millionaires who stayed at the Briarcliff Lodge and later built estates in the area. The Seven Sisters, a 1915 production, was filmed at the Briarcliff Lodge.[35]

See also

References

  1. Charles, Eleanor (May 17, 1987). "Westchester Guide". The New York Times. Retrieved November 24, 2014.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Kittredge, Jay (January 1902). Le Baron, John K., ed. "In the Region of Rest". The Four-Track News. New York Central and Hudson River Railroad. 2 (1). Retrieved February 28, 2016.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Yasinsac, Robert (2004). Images of America: Briarcliff Lodge. Charleston, South Carolina: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7385-3620-0. LCCN 2004104493. OCLC 57480785. OL 3314243M.
  4. Briarcliff Once-a-Week. 3. 1909. p. 216. Retrieved May 29, 2015.
  5. "Westchester Folk Hold Horse Show". The New York Times. July 12, 1931. Retrieved November 24, 2014.
  6. Briarcliff Manor Centennial Committee (2002). The Briarcliff Manor Family Album: Celebrating a Century. Cornwall N.Y: Village of Briarcliff Manor.
  7. 1 2 3 Cheever, Mary (1990). The Changing Landscape: A History of Briarcliff Manor-Scarborough. West Kennebunk, Maine: Phoenix Publishing. ISBN 0-914659-49-9. LCCN 90045613. OCLC 22274920. OL 1884671M.
  8. Sharman, Karen (1996). Glory in Glass: A Celebration of The Briarcliff Congregational Church. ISBN 0-912882-96-4. OCLC 429606439.
  9. Catalog of Copyright Entries. New Series: 1926, Part 1. Library of Congress Copyright Office. 1927. p. 1386. Retrieved February 27, 2014.
  10. "To Begin Spa at Briarcliff". The New York Times. May 24, 1925. Retrieved November 24, 2014.
  11. "Mlle. Daisy Jean at Briarcliff Manor". The New York Times. June 14, 1925. Retrieved November 24, 2014.
  12. 1 2 3 Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Community Development Project. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Retrieved October 21, 2016.
  13. "Hotel Business Ends at Briarcliff Lodge". The New York Times. February 17, 1933. Retrieved November 24, 2014.
  14. "Briarcliff Lodge Sold For School". The New York Times. June 19, 1937. Retrieved November 24, 2014.
  15. "Briarcliff Lodge Sold". The New York Times. September 8, 1954. Retrieved November 24, 2014.
  16. "Briarcliff Lodge Turns a New Leaf". The New York Times. July 10, 1955. Retrieved November 24, 2014.
  17. Segal, David (February 20, 2008). "God and The City". The Washington Post. The Washington Post Company. Retrieved February 27, 2014.
  18. "Westchester Sites to Receive Historical Markers". Ossining Citizen Register. Gannett Westchester Newspapers. March 28, 1985.
  19. Bird, Warren (November 14, 1994). "State Closes King's College". Christianity Today. Retrieved November 20, 2014.
  20. "Our Village: a family place for more than a century". Briarcliff Manor-Scarborough Historical Society. Retrieved February 27, 2014.
  21. Arieff, Irwin (January 22, 2010). "Luxury Retirement Community Planned in Westchester". The New York Times. Retrieved January 30, 2015.
  22. Bennett, Kate (October 16, 2015). "Coming to a Village Near You… Briarcliff's Projects Looking Good". River Journal. Retrieved October 25, 2015.
  23. 1 2 3 4 5 The Finance and Commerce of New York and United States. The New York Tribune. 1909. p. 240. Retrieved February 28, 2016.
  24. Briarcliff Once-a-Week. 3. 1909. pp. 126–7. Retrieved May 29, 2015.
  25. "Coming to Briarcliff". Scarsdale Inquirer. August 2, 1924. Retrieved May 29, 2014.
  26. "Doings at Briarcliff". Scarsdale Inquirer. September 6, 1924. Retrieved May 29, 2014.
  27. "Depew at Briarcliff". Scarsdale Inquirer. July 22, 1927. Retrieved May 29, 2014.
  28. "Pianist to Play at Briarcliff". Scarsdale Inquirer. June 13, 1925. Retrieved May 29, 2014.
  29. Swanson, Susan C.; Fuller, Elizabeth G. (1982). Westchester County: A Pictorial History. Norfolk: Donning Company. p. 127. ISBN 0-89865-156-5. OCLC 7552530.
  30. "Briarcliff Lodge - Names of Many New Yorkers on the Hotel Registers". The New York Times. June 16, 1912. Retrieved February 27, 2014.
  31. Weinstock, Cheryl (April 2, 2000). "If You're Thinking of Living In/Briarcliff Manor; Small-Town Quality But Near Manhattan". The New York Times. Retrieved February 27, 2014.
  32. "Briarcliff Manor - Fall Programme of Outdoor Sports and Pastimes". The New York Times. September 5, 1909. Retrieved February 27, 2014.
  33. Leahy, Michael (1999). If You're Thinking of Living In...: All About 115 Great Neighborhoods In & Around New York. New York: Random House LLC. p. 282. ISBN 978-0-307-42107-4.
  34. Midge Bosak, ed. (1977). A Village Between Two Rivers: Briarcliff Manor. Monarch Publishing, Inc.
  35. "Film Made at Briarcliff". The New York Times. June 7, 1915. Retrieved November 24, 2014.

Further reading

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