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| The grand entrance hall -- photo Brown Harris Stevens |
Although he grew up on his family’s modest potato farm in Rodman, New York, by the beginning of the 20th century Frank Winfield Woolworth was one of the wealthiest men in American and living in the massive French Gothic Revival-style mansion at 990 Fifth Avenue at the northeast corner of 80th Street.
Woolworth commissioned mansion designer Charles P. H. Gilbert, responsible for Woolworth’s own house, to design adjoining residences for his three married daughters just steps away from his. Built between 1911 and 1915, the center mansion, at 4 East 80th Street and similar in style to Woolworth’s, was for his eldest daughter Helena Woolworth McCann.
Woolworth commissioned mansion designer Charles P. H. Gilbert, responsible for Woolworth’s own house, to design adjoining residences for his three married daughters just steps away from his. Built between 1911 and 1915, the center mansion, at 4 East 80th Street and similar in style to Woolworth’s, was for his eldest daughter Helena Woolworth McCann.
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| The three sisters' houses in 1916 with Helena Woolworth McCann's house in the center - photo NYPL Collection |
The wide limestone façade rose six stories, with understated embellishments of finials, tracery and two monumental dormers that rose from the fifth-floor balcony. Around the entrance were carved woodland creatures including frogs and squirrels.
Lena, as Helena was popularly known, and her husband, lawyer Charles E. F. McCann, lived quietly in the French Gothic mansion with their three children, Constance, Helena and Fraiser. The couple was active in charity events and divided their time between the 80th Street house and their country estate, Sunken Orchard, in Oyster Bay, Long Island.
The interiors of the townhouse were filled with European artworks, antiques and Helena’s well-known collection of porcelain. The entrance hall featured intricate mosaic floors, a massive stone fireplace, and a grand staircase rising five stories below a stained-glass skylight. On the second floor was the 35-foot drawing room with floor-to-ceiling windows, the dining room with its large fireplace, and a solarium.
Lena, as Helena was popularly known, and her husband, lawyer Charles E. F. McCann, lived quietly in the French Gothic mansion with their three children, Constance, Helena and Fraiser. The couple was active in charity events and divided their time between the 80th Street house and their country estate, Sunken Orchard, in Oyster Bay, Long Island.
The interiors of the townhouse were filled with European artworks, antiques and Helena’s well-known collection of porcelain. The entrance hall featured intricate mosaic floors, a massive stone fireplace, and a grand staircase rising five stories below a stained-glass skylight. On the second floor was the 35-foot drawing room with floor-to-ceiling windows, the dining room with its large fireplace, and a solarium.
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| Part of the second floor as it appears today -- photo Brown Harris Stevens |
Helena McCann died in 1938, three years after giving her children more than $15 million. The mansion was sold in July 1943 to the Congregation of the Holy Cross, known as the Holy Cross Fathers, to become a novitiate house for young men studying for the priesthood. The order ran various Catholic institutions throughout the Midwest, including Notre Dame University.
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| The staircase hall with its 14-foot ceilings -- photo Brown Harris Stevens |
The Holy Cross Fathers remained in the house until August of 1955, when they sold it to the Young Men’s Philanthropic League. Forty years later, Lucille Roberts purchased the mansion for $6 million. The health-club doyenne commissioned the architectural firm Hottenroth+Joseph to restore and renovate the home. The five-year project resulted in vintage interiors being brought back to their original grandeur, as well as the adding of 20th century amenities. Roberts’ private closets featured electronic clothing racks–similar to those in a dry cleaners–which required reducing the size of an extra bedroom to accommodate the machinery. Lucille Roberts’ personal bathroom was modeled after one she admired in the Ritz Hotel in Paris. An additional floor, invisible from street level, contained a private office with full bath and staff suite. In addition to two bedrooms on the fifth floor, a gym was added.
image via zillow.com
Three years after her renovations were completed, Lucille Roberts died in 2003. In 2011, the family put the house on the market, with its 10 bedrooms, 11.5 bathrooms and three kitchens, for $90 million. It remains a single family home.





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what a gift... :)
ReplyDeletegorgeous interior...
the staircases are divine...
maureen
Why would they sell it?!? Id sell my soul for that! Sigh...
ReplyDelete