In
the span of a single lifetime, from the end of the Civil
War to the Crash of the Stock Market in 1929, American culture
as we know it sprang into being. Dubbed The Gilded Age by
Mark Twain in 1873, it was a time of unparalleled growth
in technology. Virtually everything we take for granted
in our daily lives was an invention and/or convention of
this fascinating time in America's history. The captains
of industry and commerce of The Gilded Age became wealthy
beyond what most can imagine today. Considering the magnitude
of change they effected and witnessed around them, their
belief that anything was possible and even probable, given
American ingenuity and hard work, is understandable.
Not surprisingly, this group of newly wealthy citizens
of a relatively young country found context and meaning
for their lives and good fortune by thinking of themselves
as heirs of a great Western Tradition. They traced their
cultural linage from the Greeks, through the Roman Empire,
to the European Renaissance, particularly the Venetian Renaissance.
America's upper classes and merchant classes traveled the
world visiting the great European cities and the ancient
sites of the Mediterranean, as part of a Grand Tour, collecting
and honoring their western cultural heritage. The example
of Venice's democratic society of well-to-do merchants and
traders who collected the world's wealth, loved architecture
and enjoyed a strong sense of public responsibility, appealed
to them on the basis that it was both what they were becoming
and what they aspired to.
By
1893, a blending of the Western Tradition and America's
spectacular technological growth found expression in The
World's Columbian Exposition, held in Chicago. There America's
most prominent architects and artists, backed by the wealth
of America's technological revolution, built a literal representation
of America's Gilded Age with its unique blend of technology
and Western Tradition. Perhaps the best illustration of
this blending of technology with a sense of Western Tradition
can be found in the grand facades of the exposition. Inside
they displayed the very latest in technology but the facades
were given grand names like the Palace of Electricity and
the Palace of Mechanic Arts. The White City, as the Exposition
came to be known, was a temporary stage set of monumental
proportions where Americans meant to show themselves and
the world that America was the rightful heir to, and the
highest expression of, the Western traditions and virtues
presaged by earlier societies. Never mind that virtually
all of these architects and artists had studied abroad,
at places like the Ecole des Beaux-Arts. They studied abroad
not to mimic Europe, but to pick up the threads of the arts
and culture from earlier Western societies in order to more
efficiently bring Western Culture to its full glory, which
was America's obvious destiny. It seemed to these artisans
that what they were doing was not only an obvious extension
of what Europe had previously done, but also something uniquely
different and better, in no small part because of American
technology and ingenuity.
While many great homes were built in America prior to the
Civil War, the homes built by the captains of industry and
commerce during America's Gilded Age are clearly something
different. Though relatively few in number and geographically
dispersed, these homes have much in common and represent
a distinct genre. By the 1960's most had become historic
house museums, but the visiting public has generally viewed
them as local anomalies built by unusual individuals of
great wealth, missing altogether the significance of these
homes in American history and what they can tell us about
the shaping of American culture.
While others might be considered part of this genre of
Gilded Age homes, Hearst Castle, Wyntoon, Cairnwood, Rosecliff, Marble House, The Elms, The Breakers, Nemours, Fenway Court, Biltmore,
Kykuit, Whitehall, Villa Vizcaya,
and Ca'd' Zan all clearly belong. All were begun during
a thirty-five-year period from about 1890 through 1925.
Some, like Hearst Castle, Biltmore, and Villa Vizcaya, were
true estates in the sense that they were designed to be
self-sufficient, with gardens, orchards, dairy and poultry
operations. A few, like Fenway Court and Hearst Castle,
were envisioned as museums at the time they were constructed.
Many, like Hearst Castle, Villa Vizcaya, Ca' d'Zan, Wyntoon,
and Fenway Court, reflect the strong personal involvement
of the owner in their design and collections, while others
tended to more strictly express the owner's stature in Gilded
Age Society, like Biltmore, Breakers, and Whitehall. In
some homes, especially those built more strictly as an expression
of social standing, like Whitehall, the antiques were used
to create "Period Rooms." In others, like Hearst
Castle and Fenway Court, the antiques were blended in ways
that suited the tastes of the owner and the time, often
very much influenced by architect Stanford White's interesting
and unusual sense of style. Essentially all were products
of architects trained at the Ecole des Beaux Arts and were
furnished with many antiques coming into America from France,
Spain, and Italy through dealers and auction houses in New
York.
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| Biltmore Estate,
Asheville, North Carolina |
Hearst Castle, San
Simeon, California |
Without exception, these great homes from America's Gilded
Age are wonderful and unique windows into a time of unprecedented
change and creativity in American culture. A time when the
explosive growth in technology made some wealthy and promised
a utopia where individuals could develop to their highest
and best purpose. A time when, for many Americans, all of
human history seemed to point to America and its destiny
to bring Western culture to its ultimate expression.
Fortunately for us and future generations, most of these
homes have been preserved as museums and are now part of
our common cultural heritage. Without them our appreciation
and understanding of this fascinating period in American
history would be severely diminished.
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