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Ogden Mills House

Demolished mansion in Manhattan, New York


Demolished mansion in Manhattan, New York

FieldValue
nameOgden Mills House
image_alt
image_caption
coordinates
location_city
start_date1885
completion_date1887
demolition_datelate 1930s
landlord
architectRichard Morris Hunt
main_contractorDavid H. King, Jr.
website

The Ogden Mills House was a former mansion located on 2 East 69th Street on the Upper East Side of Manhattan in New York City.

History

The Ogden Mills House was designed by famed architect Richard Morris Hunt and overlooked Central Park. It was constructed at the corner of East 69th Street and Park Avenue on the Upper East Side for Ogden Mills between 1885 and 1887. It was located across the street from both the E. H. Harriman town house and 1 East 70th Street, a mansion constructed in 1912–1914 by Thomas Hastings of Carrère and Hastings, which today houses the Frick Collection of Carnegie Steel Company chairman Henry Clay Frick.

Unlike Hunt's 1886 project, built in the Châteauesque style and known as the Petit Chateau for William K. Vanderbilt, the Ogden Mills House was much more restrained in its style.

After Mills' death in 1929, the home was left to his son, U.S. Treasury Secretary and U.S. Representative Ogden Livingston Mills, who died at the residence on October 11, 1937. The house was torn down in the late 1930s and an apartment building was erected in its place.

References

References

  1. (November 7, 2012). "The Ogden Mills Residence". www.beyondthegildedage.com.
  2. {{cite New York 1960
  3. (1921). "Real Estate Record and Builders' Guide". C.W. Sweet & Company.
  4. (1893). "The Harvard Graduates' Magazine". Harvard Graduates' Magazine Association.
  5. Kathrens, Michael C.. (2005). "Great Houses of New York, 1880-1930". Acanthus Press.
  6. (1996). "Biographical Dictionary of the United States Secretaries of the Treasury, 1789-1995". Greenwood Publishing Group.
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