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Old Westbury Gardens – blooms and memories

Beth Goffe • Aug 09, 2021

 

NOTE - I decided it’s time to start up a blog. I’ve got lots of ideas to share concerning a variety of topics, such as history, nature, birdwatching, and Gilded Age, which is the subject of the article below. This article originally appeared in 2014; I thought I’d initially share an existing article and move on to new content. Enjoy and please keep an eye out for new articles!

 

 

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Several years back, I decided to return to Old Westbury Gardens and subsequently wrote this piece. My parents used to take my brother and me to Westbury Gardens on a regular basis when we still lived on Long Island, way back in the day. I thought it would be nice to see the place again on a clement autumn afternoon.

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Westbury House, as it was originally dubbed, was completed in 1906, built by John (Jay) S. Phipps, the son of Andrew Carnegie’s partner at US Steel, and Margerita (Dita) Grace, of the Grace shipping family. The story is that he persuaded Dita to marry him with a promise of an English manor house and gardens for her, like those in which she lived during her teens.

On its surface, the place is purely a relic of Gilded-Age opulence, a Charles II-style manse, all luxuriant gardens, vast marble fireplaces, priceless Chinese silk wallpaper and an enormous formal dining room. To wit, the front aspect (with a photobomb by my cousin Jeremey):

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However, unlike many large Long Island estates, built with the advent of automobile travel around the turn of the century, and used only during intolerable New York summers, this was truly a family home, well-occupied. It was filled with children (four), whose parents doted on them and their beloved dogs. Many of these pets were interred, complete with headstones, in one of the gardens. When England suffered German bombing raids during World War 2, Dita hosted a number of British children to keep them safe. When I was a child, I recall the place as having been quite lived-in, homey, even, with obviously well-used sofas and carpets that looked somewhat thread-worn in spots. Thirty-plus years later, the house appears more polished.

Unfortunately, photography is not allowed indoors, so I’m unable to share interior shots. I did grab this on the fly from the second floor landing looking down to the front lawns:

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The sitting room and exteriors were used in the film, Love Story. In fact, Westbury Gardens has been used many, many times in film, television and print advertisement. More prominent films include North By Northwest, Wolf with Jack Nicholson and Age of Innocence, which used the beautiful west porch and walled garden to great effect. More recently, the HBO film, Bernard and Doris, about Doris Duke (Susan Sarandon) and her butler (Ralph Fiennes) was filmed there (in the ballroom), as was the cable TV show, Royal Pains.

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South elevation (rear)

The beech tree to the left of the house was a mature specimen when it was planted in 1906.  I don’t recall its age at the time of its installation, but I love that it’s well over a hundred years old.

Dita and Jay Phipps died in 1957 and 1958, respectively. Prior to his death, Jay established a trust in order to preserve the estate. His only daughter, Peggie, became chairman of the Old Westbury Gardens, Inc. and remained active until her death in 2006. I had the good fortune to have met Peggie just before we moved to New Jersey when I was in sixth grade. I remember her as a lovely woman who was very proud of her home. She had all the time in the world to spend with a little kid who was clearly enamored with it (she had long since moved to a smaller property on the grounds) and her childhood. She had promised my brother and me a tour of the third floor, which is closed to visitors, but since we moved away, we didn’t have an opportunity to take advantage of that offer. As mentioned, Peggie passed away in 2006, two months shy of her 100th birthday.  (The photo of Peggie and her beloved companion, Tilly, below came from the New York Social Diary website.)

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As fabulous as the house is, the gardens are where the 100+ acre estate really shines. These were Dita’s domain and she was intrinsically involved in their design and maintenance during her time. The horticultural staff takes great pride in the upkeep of the gardens, which remain as beautiful as they were over a century ago. Of the many gardens, included are rose, boxwood, formal walled, and shade gardens. The property also hosts woodlands, ponds, and grand landscaped meadows. Because of its size and complexity, maintenance is a tremendous undertaking: some of the gardens are completely replanted every couple of weeks! Thanks to greenhouses on-site, some of which sit on the former polo grounds, a constant source of plant materials is available. One aspect I really appreciate is their effort to reduce the use of pesticides and chemical fertilizers.

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Pretty zinnia

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Peggie’s childhood playhouse

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Callicarpa (beautyberry shrub)

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To crib from Marvel’s Agents of Shield (I actually wrote this piece before any of the Marvel films were released), Old Westbury Gardens is a magical place.  It’s worth making the trip out to Long Island. It does not disappoint. Their website: https://www.oldwestburygardens.org/

 

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