November 10, 2000, Friday
Section: Page One
Touring the Tiffany Estate:
Laurelton Hall Lives Only in the Shadows of the
Imagination
By DAGMAR FORS KARPPI
Pat Burke, like many local
residents, fondly remembers seeing the Tiffany minaret gleaming in
the reflection of a sunrise, as she sat with her brother, fishing
in Oyster Bay. Local sailors know where the Tiffany minaret is
located, and now some landlubbers do too.
The Oyster Bay Historical
Society gave a tour on Wednesday, Nov. 1, of the perimeter of
Laurelton Hall, the estate of Louis Comfort Tiffany. The property
has been sold in housing lots and is in private hands. The tour was
a hiking challenge, but the autumn color display eased the
way.
The walk is part of the
OBHS concentration on Louis C. Tiffany in Oyster Bay 2000, with
events scheduled for October, November and December. The walking
tour was led by the OBHS Louis Comfort Tiffany project co-curators
Maureen Monck, Ph.D., a psychoanalyst and Tom Kuehhas, director of
the Oyster Bay Histocial Society.
Mr. Kuehhas explained that
the OBHS has a great collection of 17th, 18th, and 19th century
material and is working on celebrating the 20th century in Oyster
Bay. Mr. Tiffany is the first of a series of notable residents they
will be highlighting.
The walking group met in
the parking lot of the Village Hall of Laurel Hollow, from where
the top of the minaret can be seen. The original 600 acre estate
covered what is now the villages of Laurel Hollow and Cove Neck.
The Tiffanys originally lived at The Briars, a more traditional
house located on the estate, one that Mrs. Tiffany loved. She
didn't want to move to Laurelton Hall, and died before the move
occurred.
The group first walked up
a 45 degree hill to the Sarah Hanley house. She was the "lady in
yellow" who attended six o'clock Mass at St. Dominic's every
morning. She often drove Mr. Tiffany's yellow automobile and loved
to wear his favorite color - yellow. Ms. Hanley, who had been one
of LCT's Irish nurses during his recovery from a kidney ailment,
became his companion for over 20 years. The Tiffany children were
opposed to his marrying the Irish immigrant. The original Tiffany
family came to America, in the mid 1600s.
The Hanley house is now
owned, by a Huntington couple who are restoring it. The house was
left by Ms. Hanley, after her death, to Dominican nuns who used the
house for retreats. The view of the harbor is
spectacular.
The walkers saw two views
of a remnant of the interior walkway at Laurelton Hall that
connected the family section with the serving areas. They saw a
remaining stone gateway that gave a glimpse of the Tiffany art
gallery (with no admittance allowed); a pond, and the beach for a
closer glimpse of the minaret that had been a chimney for the
heating plant for the house. From there the walkers could see the
Laurel Hollow parking lot. If the weather had been warmer, brave
swimmers could have used the water as a short cut back to their
cars.
The minaret was a key to
why Laurelton Hall no longer remains.
Tom Kuehhas, said it took
a barge full of coal to start up the heating plant and took a barge
a day to keep it going. When the trustees took over the house that
cost about $2 million to build, they couldn't afford to keep up
with the heating bills. In 1946, the contents of Laurelton Hall
were sold at auction by the Tiffany Foundation to provide for art
scholarships. They sold the house for $10,000.
The owners never lived in
the house. It was left abandoned and later vandalized. No one is
sure how the fire occurred, that destroyed the house in 1957, but
vandals are suspected as the cause.
About a year ago the final
ruins of Laurelton Hall were carted away. A watercolor painting of
the ruins, by Francis Webb Roosevelt is on display at the OBHS
building, the Earle-Wightman House at 20 Summit Street, as part of
their Tiffany exhibit.
The Tiffany series
continues with Cynthia Williams, associate director of the American
Decorative Arts Graduate Program at the Smithsonian Institute and
Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum in Washington D.C., in a
lecture on "Tiffany Glass Art," on Sunday, Nov. 12 at 2 p.m. at the
Oyster Bay Community Center.
- Professor Jennifer
Goldsborough will speak on the history and various silver services
used in hosting a "Proper Tea," on Thursday, Nov. 16 from 1:30 to 4
p.m. at Planting Fields Arboretum. Participants are invited to
bring one piece of their own tea equipment for discussion by the
speaker. The lecture, will be followed by a proper tea.
- Professor Ira Prilik
will allow participants to view actual Tiffany objects while he
discusses their construction at the Prilik Galleries, 726 Franklin
Ave., Garden City.
- There will be a slide
lecture on Friday, Dec. 8, at 7:30 p.m. by Tiffany scholars Judith
and Raymond Spinzia. They will present a slide lecture of
significant Long Island examples of Tiffany ecclesiastical windows,
as well as some fine examples of those which graced Laurelton
Hall.
For fees and reservations
and information, please call 922-5032.
Copyright © The Oyster
Bay Enterprise-Pilot, November 10, 2000.
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Last update: 11/14/2000.
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