Wednesday, December 28, 2011

'Manor House'

'Manor House', the John Teele Pratt estate designed by Charles A. Platt c. 1909 in Glen Cove. Click HERE and HERE for more on 'Manor House'. Click HERE to see 'Manor House' on google earth and HERE on bing.


Photos from The Brickbuilder, 1912.

7 comments:

The Down East Dilettante said...

Okay, I finally had the epiphany about this house. It occupies a real place in the national architectural story---it was one of the most published and most admired houses of its day when it was new. Its architectural quality is undeniable. Yet it arouses no passion in me---it's almost too slick and well groomed, nothing out of place, completely safe. It's the ultimate suburban house---and not because it actually is suburban, but because it now seems so familiar, having been copied so many times since, on a smaller scale, in suburbs from coast to coast. What was a new and original take on an old architectural form when first built, has spawned so many imitators that it has become the cliche

Patricia said...

What is that pole extending out of the house in the third exterior photo? A flagpole?

The Ancient said...

Neo-phlegmaticism at its very best.

The Devoted Classicist said...

Yes, that is a flagpole extending from the pediment of the entrance portico. Maybe it is not the most architecturally exciting early 20th century house on Long Island, but it is certainly handsome.

ChipSF said...

Platt revisited this theme in 1934 for his second house for Mrs. Russell Alger, Jr. in Grosse Pointe.

The house is still extant on Voltaire Place between Vendome and Kerby.

John K said...

Is everyone aware this was the house Andy Pratt's father, Edwin Baker Pratt, grew up in?

Andy Pratt is a rock and roll pioneer. Loved and respected by industry insiders, he is still performing these days off and on in Boston. Director Todd Haynes used Pratt's song "Avenging Annie" in his film "Velvet Goldmine." It doesn't get any cooler than that!

And my thanks once again to Zach for this remarkable, wonderful blog.

Anonymous said...

Not to take anything away from Andy Pratt, but he's twenty years too young to be classified as any sort of "rock and roll pioneer."

Johnny Burnette. Gene Vincent. Little Richard. Howlin Wolf. Bo Diddley. Jerry Lee Lewis. Etc.