- Estherwood (Dobbs Ferry, New York)
Infobox nrhp
name = Estherwood and Carriage House
nrhp_type =
caption = West (front) elevation, 2008
lat_degrees = 41
lat_minutes = 00
lat_seconds = 38
lat_direction = N
long_degrees = 73
long_minutes = 52
long_seconds = 13
long_direction = W
location = Dobbs Ferry, NY
nearest_city = Yonkers
area = 10 acres (4 ha)cite web|last=Kennedy|first=Karen|title=National Register of Historic Places nomination, Estherwood and Carriage House|url=http://www.oprhp.state.ny.us/hpimaging/hp_view.asp?GroupView=10401|publisher=New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation |date=November 1979|accessdate=2008-06-17]
built = 1894-5
architect = [Albert] Buchman & Deisler
architecture =Renaissance Revival (mansion), Queen Anne (carriage house), other
designated =
added = 1979
established =
visitation_num =
visitation_year =
refnum = 79001646
mpsub =
governing_body =The Masters School Estherwood is a late 19th-century mansion located on the campus of
The Masters School in Dobbs Ferry,New York ,United States . It was the home of industrial tycoon James Jenning McComb, who supported Masters financially in its early years when his daughters attended. The house'soctagon allibrary was the first section built. It had been attached to McComb's previous home, but he had felt it deserved a house more in keeping with its style and so had architect Albert Buchman design Estherwood built around it.The interior features lavish decoration and detail, with generous use of
marble andgold leaf . As the only significantchâteauesque building in Westchester County, it was added to theNational Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in 1979.Buildings
The Estherwood NRHP listing recognizes both the mansion and its carriage house as contributing resources. Both are located on a 10-acre (4 ha) parcel just east of the main Masters buildings.
Mansion exterior
The house is three and a half stories high, with a varying number of bays on each of its sides. It is faced in white pressed brick with granite trim and terra-cotta detailing. Its roof is black and red
ceramic tile , withcopper cresting and stone filials, from which four red brickchimney s rise. A copper-cladcupola , caps the eastfacade 's tower. Theporte-cochere on the west facade, the house's main entrance, is supported by granite piers andDoric order columns. It has aGuastavino tile ceiling to match the one on theveranda that encircles the rest of the house. The irregular fenestration includes fifteendormer window s and a second-storyoriel window .Mansion interior
From the entrance, there is a vestibule with
mosaic flooring,marble baseboard s, classical molding andbronze light fixtures. It leads to 65-foot (20 m) long Great Hall that rises two stories to acoffer ed ceiling and skylights. A divided staircase of pinkmarble rises to a gallery that overlooks the hall. Thebalcony is supported by Ionic columns on highplinth s. The hall also features a green marblefireplace withlimestone trim. Theoak parquet floor has a carvedGreek key -patterned border repeated on the underside of the gallery.Six rooms are located off the Great Hall, also with lavish decoration. The
dining room has dark oak walls with carved Northern European motifs such as boars' and rams' heads, broken by copper andbronze medieval [sconce] s. Built-in service units are supported bycaryatid s. The north wall is broken by the fireplace, with a mosaic wall and surround. The adjacent plaster wall is painted Pompeii red. The shallow vaulted ceiling is, like the Great Hall, coffered.The Music Room, known as the "Red Room", features an
alcove flanked by red marble columns andpilaster s, both with capitals highlighted ingold leaf . Adamesque swags and garlands, also highlighted in gold, are carved into the wall and ceiling along with musical motifs such aslyre s, horns andPan flute s. These motifs recur in thestained glass window transoms. The south wall is ofmahogany with brass trim; it features the Music Room's fireplace, flanked by carved Corinthian pilasters.The Reception Room features intricately patterned plaster walls and ceilings. Two of its windows have gold-stained panels, and an original crystal
chandelier still hangs. Thedrawing room at the house's northwest corner features scrolled brackets and marble Composite columns on high plinths. Its marble fireplace has wood surrounds.The large octagonal library has a central octagonal stained-glass skylight. Stained glass, with a rich floral motif, is also found in the transoms of the two large windows in the north wall. Other ornament includes the plaster molding with gold leaf. The shelving is made of dark Honduran mahogany. Of the six major rooms on the main floor, the Billiards Room is the least decorated, with oak
wainscoting and eared windows and doors. The plaster ceiling likewise has a simple molding and a central medallion.Upstairs, the house has been remodeled somewhat by the school, but the bird's-eye
maple and golden oak woodwork have been retained, as well as the frosted glass closet-door panels andsliding door s off the gallery. Theattic also features its original arched doorways, water tanks, and unusual floor-to-ceiling diagonal braces in the center.Carriage house
The carriage house is located to the east of the main house, downhill from it. It was built to take advantage of the slope, in a massed Queen Anne style with Stick-style porte-cochére. Its interior features wrought-iron columnar supports and sliding doors between every space.
History
Ohio native James Jenning McComb's wealth came from his invention of the ties that secured
cotton as it emerged frombaler s. In the 1860s he came to Dobbs Ferry, where he sent his three daughters to the Misses' Masters School, named for its founding sisters in 1877. He bought the current property and eventually moved his family to the small Park Cottage (still standing) near the school's Clinton Avenue location to shorten his daughters' walk to school.The octagonal library was first built as an addition to Park Cottage, to complement an octagonal library desk McComb had bought in Europe. He was soon dissatisfied with how poorly the new room integrated with the rest of the house, and hired the New York firm of Buchman & Deisler to design a new house connected to the library that would better match it.
McComb and his family lived in Estherwood from its completion in 1895 to his death in 1901. He had continued to acquire nearby property and rent it to the school, and in 1910 the school bought it all, including Estherwood and the carriage house, from his heirs. It has made few changes to the building, primarily adding an
elevator in 1949. Estherwood was used as adormitory for many years; today its upper floors serve as faculty apartments and the main floor is used for special events and school functions.cite web|title=Estherwood|url=http://www.themastersschool.com/about/estherwood.htm|publisher=The Masters School |date=2004|accessdate=2008-06-18]Aesthetics
Estherwood is a rare residential commission for Albert Buchman, better known for commercial and institutional structures such as the "
New York World " Tower and the Student Building atBarnard College . He brought to the commission a breadth of architectural knowledge and an awareness of the ostentatious tastes of the new rich of theGilded Age . In its lavish use of materials and elements that would be characterized asconspicuous consumption , Estherwood has been compared toRichard Morris Hunt 'sThe Breakers , theVanderbilt family summer home inNewport, Rhode Island , that had been completed only three years before, attracting much notice as the most expensive house ever built at that time.References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.