Wednesday, February 26, 2014

'Clayton' Aerial

A 1938 aerial of 'Clayton', originally the Stephen Lloyd Bryce estate designed by Ogden Codman Jr. c. 1901 in Roslyn and for many years the Childs Frick estate.  Click HERE and HERE for more on 'Clayton'.  Photo from Stony Brook University's Digital Archive.

6 comments:

sagexlibris said...

The mile long drive to the house must have really gone over with guests. How many other estates had a mile long drive and are any of these drives still intact?

I was always under the impression the Childs Frick was disinherited. Something to do with Taxidermy, I think.

Zach L. said...

The loop at Caumsett is 3 miles long making it 1.5 miles to the house. Great for bike riding.

Doug Floor Plan said...

Looking at Zach's link to Bing -- the small formal garden next to what is now the parking lot doesn't appear in the 1938 aerial ... unexpected.

Anonymous said...

DFP if you mean the restored garden featured on the Nassau County Museum website, if you look very closely as the 1930's photo image is very faint, you can see the lines of the formal garden with circular reflecting pool and cross axis, etc just to the west of the large expanse of lawn, the current location of the parking area. It's there, just difficult to see in the aerial NYA

Kellsboro Jack said...

re: 1-mile "drive".

Any proper English estate worth its salt would've had a meandering approach road that would been longer. The American estates of the Gilded era emulated the same. With specimen trees, meadows, intentionally limiting glimpses of the manor house, and perhaps an arched bridge over a brook that journey on the property would've been part of the grand impression. In fact it was a treat.

If only the wealthy of today would revel in having longer approach roads. I maybe perhaps in the minority, but I loathe a manor house just 30-yards away from the public road. That's all well and good and to be expected in congested hamlets but if you have the money and are out in the country buy some privacy.

Anonymous said...

Kudos to the people responsible for the first class restoration of the Frick formal garden and the woodenr trelliage, one of the few remaining examples on Long Island of the once many trellis structures found in similar gardens.