Building in Rhode Island, United States
Chepstow is an Italianate house museum located at 120 Narragansett Avenue in Newport, Rhode Island , built in 1860. It originally served as a summer "cottage", but the Preservation Society of Newport County now owns the property. It was listed in the National Register of Historic Places as part of the Ochre Point-Cliffs Historic District in 1975 and within the Historic District of the City of Newport.[ 1]
History
Chepstow, May 2017
Edmund Schermerhorn hired George Champlin Mason Sr. to build the house in 1860 as a summer home.[ 2] [ 3] Schermerhorn was a first cousin of Mrs. Astor (formerly Caroline Webster Schermerhorn ), one of Newport's most active hostesses.[ 4] [ 5]
In 1911,[ 6] it was sold to Emily Lorillard (née Morris) Gallatin,[ 7] the wife of Rolaz Horace Gallatin,[ 8] [ 9] a cousin of Albert Eugene Gallatin and nephew of Commodore Elbridge Thomas Gerry .[ 10] The property, named for Chepstow , the town in Wales that the Morris family came from, overlooks Narragansett Avenue . Emily was first cousin of Lewis Gouverneur Morris who married Anita de Braganza and owned Malbone in Newport.[ 11] [ a]
The property remained in her family's possession until it was donated to the Preservation Society in 1986 upon Alletta Morris McBean's death. The house has been altered through additions,[ 13] the most recent in 1979 with the addition of the garden room (also called the sun room) by architect John K. Grosvenor . It opened to the public in 1998 following Peter McBean's death.[ 14] [ 15]
Present day
Beginning in June 1998. The property houses a dynamic collection of art and furniture, including some from other Morris family residences. Among the American paintings bequeathed to the Society that hung at Chepstow were works by George Harvey , Fitz Hugh Lane and Granville Perkins . Among the furnishings is a walnut Queen Anne side chair reportedly owned by William Penn .[ 4]
References
Notes
Sources
^ Tax Assessor’s Plat 34; Chapter 17.40 and 17.80 of the Codified Ordinances of the City of Newport.
^ "DEATH OF A RICH RECLUSE.; EDMUND H. SCHERMERHORN, AN ECCENTRIC NEWPORT COTTAGER" . The New York Times . 2 October 1891. Retrieved 19 March 2021 .
^ "AN OLD LANDMARK TO GO.; THE SCHERMERHORN MANSION TO GIVE PLACE TO A BUSINESS BUILDING" . The New York Times . 7 December 1892. Retrieved 19 March 2021 .
^ a b Fulweiler, Megan (7 June 1998). "TRAVEL ADVISORY; Two Mansions Join the Newports Tour Loop" . The New York Times . Retrieved 19 March 2021 .
^ Amory, Cleveland (2 September 1962). "The Crucial Battle of Modern Newport; The Battle of Newport" . The New York Times . Retrieved 19 March 2021 .
^ Times, Special to The New York (7 April 1912). "NEWPORT" . The New York Times . Retrieved 19 March 2021 .
^ John Conrad Weiser Family Association (1960). The Weiser family: a genealogy of the family of John Conrad Weiser, the elder (d. 1746); prepared on the two hundred fiftieth anniversary of his arrival in America, 1710-1760 . John Conrad Weiser Family Assoc. p. 210. Retrieved 27 September 2017 .
^ "R. HORACE GALLATIN" . The New York Times . 2 November 1948. Retrieved 27 September 2017 .
^ "ESTATE OF MRS. GALLATIN; It Exceeds $1,000,000 and Husband Gets $30,000 a Year for Life" . The New York Times . 4 April 1917. Retrieved 27 September 2017 .
^ "A DAY'S WEDDINGS. | Gallatin--Morris" . The New York Times . 29 April 1896. Retrieved 27 September 2017 .
^ Times, Special to The New York (17 February 1904). "A NEWPORT SHOW PLACE SOLD.; "Malbone," the Residence of Henry Bedlow, Bought by L.G. Morris" (PDF) . The New York Times . Retrieved 20 November 2019 .
^ Smith, Andy (November 2, 2013). "Neo-gothic castle in Newport is one of a kind, at $2.2 million" . Providence Journal . Retrieved 20 November 2019 .
^ Hammel, Lisa (6 October 1968). "Newport preserved" . The New York Times . Retrieved 19 March 2021 .
^ The Preservation Society of Newport County – Online Ticket Center (accessed January 7, 2009)
^ "Visit RI website information" . Archived from the original on 2008-06-02. Retrieved 2009-01-07 .
External links
41°28′34.1″N 71°18′17.7″W / 41.476139°N 71.304917°W / 41.476139; -71.304917
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