Staatsburgh State Historic Site
The Staatsburgh State Historic Site is located in the hamlet of Staatsburg, Dutchess County, New York, United States. The historic site preserves a Beaux-Arts mansion designed by McKim, Mead, and White and its surrounding landscape. It is located within Ogden Mills & [Ruth Livingston Mills State Park]. The mansion, a List of [New York State Historic Sites|New York State Historic Site], is considered a fine example of the great estates built during the Gilded Age.
History
In 1792, Morgan Lewis, the third governor of New York, purchased an estate covering of about and commissioned the construction of a colonial-style house on the site of the present-day mansion. In the summer of 1824, on his Visit of the [Marquis de Lafayette to the United States|visit to the United States], the Marquis de Lafayette dined there on his way upriver to visit Lewis' brother-in-law, Chancellor Livingston.In 1832, this first house was destroyed by a fire, said to be an act of arson committed by disgruntled tenant farmers. After the fire, Morgan Lewis and his wife, Gertrude Livingston, a sister of Chancellor Robert R. Livingston, immediately replaced the structure with a Greek Revival mansion with 25 rooms. The house was inherited in 1844 by Morgan Lewis's daughter Margaret and her husband Maturin Livingston; and in 1847 by the couple's son Maturin Livingston Jr..
In 1890, Ruth Livingston Mills, the great-granddaughter of Morgan Lewis and the mother of Ogden L. Mills, Secretary of the Treasury, inherited the estate. Not long afterwards, Ruth Livingston Mills and her husband, the financier and philanthropist Ogden Mills, commissioned a remodeling and enlargement of the mansion to the architectural firm of McKim, Mead, and White; the principal architect was Stanford White. Work started in 1895 and when completed in the following year, he had turned the house into a Beaux-Arts mansion with 65 rooms, 14 bathrooms, and 23 fireplaces. The work is reported to have cost about $350,000. As part of the process, a coal-powered electricity plant was constructed near the Hudson River to supply the electric lights in the mansion, which was also equipped with central heating. The mansion was used as a residence and for entertaining by the family; they owned five homes in total, and stayed at Staatsburgh mainly during the fall season between mid-September and the Christmas holidays. During this time, they hosted house parties, balls, and dinners. At the remainder of the year, the family stayed in one of their other residences in New York City, Paris, Newport, Rhode Island, and California. Before her death, Ruth Livingston Mills began acquiring lands surrounding the estate. After her death in 1920, Ogden Mills continued to purchase the surrounding property, enlarging the acreage of the property to total over, the size of the mansion grounds at the time that it was given to the state of New York. In 1929, the property was passed on to their son, Ogden Livingston Mills and upon his death in 1937, on to his sister Gladys Mills Phipps.
In 1938, Gladys Mills Phipps donated the house and of land to the state of New York as a memorial to her parents. As a State Historic Site, the estate is operated by the New York [State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation]. In 1988, the Friends of Mills Mansion were organized to support the preservation and educational work at the site.