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Friday, November 25, 2011

Gilded Age, New York


Two of the most influential arbiters of taste were Edith Wharton, the aristocratic New York writer of Novels and Essays, and Ogden Codman Jr., an Architect and Interior Designer. 


Ogden Codman Jr. House in Manhattan, abandoned 1927

They co-wrote the book The Decoration of Houses, which emphasized clean, simple lines hearkening back to Georgian proportion, decorative styles and colors. This was in direct revolt of the over-done, heavily decorated houses of the Victorian Era.



Henry Poor House, Gramercy Park North,





Henry Poor Drawing Room Interior Design by Stanford White


Pulitzer Mansion


Pulitzer Interior
Harkness Mansion


Taylor Mansion

 Woolworth Mansion
Woolworth Mansion
Mr. Woolworth

Burden Mansion (left) and Hammond Mansion (right)


Otto Kahn Mansion



Unidentified Mansion 


Tiffany Mansion
Percy Pyne Mansion
Sloan Mansion
Rhinelander Mansion
 Warburg Mansion
Warburg Interior
De Lamar Mansion


Fletcher Mansion

Cook Mansion


Frick Mansion
Duke Mansion

Andrew Carnegie Mansion

WC Whitney Mansion


WC Whitney Ballroom


WC Whitney


Schwab Mansion

Schwab Floor Plans

Mrs. Astor's  Mansion


Mrs. Astor's Floor Plans

Mrs. Astor's  Stairhall



Mrs. Astor's Ballroom


Cornelius Vanderbilt II Mansion

Cornelius Vanderbilt II Floor Plans

Cornelius Vanderbilt II Mansion Interior


Cornelius Vanderbilt II Mansion



William H. Vanderbilt and Cornelius V. Vanderbilt III Mansion 640 Fifth Avenue
William K. Vanderbilt Mansion 660 Fifth Avenue


Cornelius Vanderbilt II Mansion