By the 1890s New York's elite were erecting enormous "cottages" like Alva Vanderbilt's Marble House. |
Newport's charming colonial architecture and atmosphere, along with its cooling seaside breezes, attracted the wealthy in the 1850s. |
“I forgot to mention the sensation produced by the arrival this morning of about thirty trunks belonging to a handsome New-York widow—one of the trunks being about the size of an Irish shanty. I am so glad, as Pa scolded a little about the trunk I bought to pack my hoops in; and called it ‘Noah’s Ark.’ But after seeing this huge dry goods warehouse in the hall to-day, he promised to laugh at mine no more.”
Like the other visitors in 1856, Belle Brittan stayed in a hotel. In 1857 “Appletons’ Illustrated Hand-Book of American Travel” noted “The flood of travel has called up, too, a number of magnificent hotels, of which the chief are, the Ocean House, at the south end of Bellevue street; the Atlantic House, at the head of Pelham street; the Bellevue House, on Catherine street; the Aquidneck and the Fillmore.” Already the guide was calling Newport “the most elegant and fashionable of all American watering-places.”
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After the Civil War Newport became more crowded. Morning beach-goers enjoy the cool air, although a bit more dressed than today. -- print NYPL Collection |
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A well dressed family poses before an early "cottage" around 1869 -- NYPL Collection |
Hotels were no longer acceptable for New York's wealthy. Construction turned into a frenzy, with millionaires vying to outdo one another in throwing up larger and more palatial residences. It would climax towards the end of the century with monumental mansions like Marble House and Rosecliff.
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A sleek carriage with liveried coachmen deliveres a visitor to a Newport cottage -- NYPL Collection |
When Mrs. Hermann Oelrichs entertained one evening at Rosecliff, her opulent mansion modeled after the Grand Trianon at Versailles, she had a fleet of white ships constructed to float offshore in sight of the gardens. The ships complimented the swans she stocked in the fountain and the masses of white roses, lilies, orchids and hydrangeas that decorated the house and lawns.
"Tessie" Oelrichs, the sister of Virginia Fair Vanderbilt, was a leading figure in Manhattan-Newport society. She entertained lavishly from Rosecliff (above). |
And then there was the matter of the ladies’ wardrobes.
Women required no fewer than 280 changes of costume during a typical season. Off-season trips to France were not simply to sample the cuisine and see the sights; they meant hours spent in the salons of Paris designers. The millionaires who made their fortunes in banking and real estate showed off their wealth through horses and exclusive club memberships. Their wives displayed their financial and social status in gowns and jewels.
The women changed costumes several times a day. There were reception gowns, dinner dresses, visiting dresses, evening gowns and day dresses. And there was one cardinal rule: never wear the same dress twice. The wealthiest of the New York-Newport socialites patronized the House of Worth in Paris, among them the Astors, Rockefellers, Vanderbilts, Fishes and Carnegies. While some return clients would spent around $10,000 on a season’s wardrobe, others would spend that amount on a single ball gown.
Mrs. Stuyvesant Fish is remembered for greeting a group of guests in her opulent Newport mansion one evening saying “Here you are again; older faces and younger clothes.” When the season ended, all the dresses and gowns worn that year were given away, sent off to poorer relatives or given to servants. The next year it would start all over.
In April of 1895 The New York Times made a slight mention of the lengths the cottage owners went to in order to outfit their homes. “Many rare and valuable exotic plants have arrived here this week for Ogden Goelet and Cornelius Vanderbilt. Both purchased them recently abroad, and they are said to include species which have not hitherto been seen here. They are for the most part plants of beautiful foliage and are designed for the decoration of the grounds of the new villas of Mr. Goelet and Mr. Vanderbilt.”
Social climbers risked their entire fortunes in attempts to be noticed by Newport society. An engraved invitation to dinner or a dance from Mrs. Fish or Mrs. Astor was a coup—it meant acceptance. It also meant the lady of the house was expected to join in a regimented routine. Mornings were spent at Bailey’s Beach—in full dress, of course--a private beach at the end of Cliff Walk. Afternoons were taken up in luncheons, teas, and perhaps other activities like tennis or archery. Evenings included dinners and a party at one cottage or another. Acceptance into Newport society could very well mean the financial failure of the husband not rich enough to keep up.
The mistress of a Bellevue Avenue mansion was expected to give no fewer than six dinners for sixty guests and two balls for 600 within the eight to ten-week season. The leading socialites would spent millions of dollars of their husbands' fortunes each summer.
The mistress of a Bellevue Avenue mansion was expected to give no fewer than six dinners for sixty guests and two balls for 600 within the eight to ten-week season. The leading socialites would spent millions of dollars of their husbands' fortunes each summer.
The vast mansions of that glittering era remain, perched upon the cliffs over the sea. The breezes still waft over the lawns, but no longer do they cool the parasol-shaded heads of New York’s wealthiest women. In some, troops of tourists in madras shorts and flip flops tromp through the gilt drawing rooms; proof that the Gilded Age has indeed come to a close.
non-credited photographs taken by the author
non-credited photographs taken by the author