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New York Architecture
Images- Newport Mansions, Brooklyn Beacon
Rock |
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architect
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McKim, Mead
and White
grounds Olmsted |
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location
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145 Harrison Avenue,
Newport, RI |
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date
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1889 |
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style
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Neoclassical |
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type
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House |
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An exceptional oceanfront estate of
approximately eight acres with two thousand feet of frontage on Breton
Cove. Beacon Rock is built into a dramatic rocky bluff off the "Ocean
Drive" near Fort Adams State Park, overlooking Newport Harbor and the
Newport Bridge. The mansion, fashioned after the Greek Parthenon, has 48
monolithic columns and open porches of solid marble. The residence offers
a 40 foot deepwater dock, waterviews from nearly all of its sixteen
principal rooms, fourteen fireplaces, hardwood floors, roof terrace and a
full attic. This outstanding residence was built by McKim, Mead and White
for Edwin D. Morgan, brother of J.P. Morgan, in 1889. In 1951, the
property was purchased by Felix De Weldon, a world renowned artist, who is
most famous for his stirring bronze sculpture of the U.S. Marine flag
raising on Mount Suribachi during the Battle of Iwo Jima in World War II.
The landscaped grounds, originally designed by Frederick Law Olmsted,
include a winding drive over a triple arched bridge, tall hedges and stone
walls protecting the perimeter of the property, ornamental ironwork gates
and an entrance courtyard featuring a boxwood hedge maze.
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contact
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nyc-architecture.com
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links
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http://www.newportmansions.org/
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