Beautiful. What an incredible loss to the city...it is absolutely beautiful..Ken thank you for all your research and finding these fabulous one of a kind homes to show to us.
I was only in the park once as it is the site of the Metropolitan Museum's "The Cloisters." I seem to remember having read that Rockefeller, Jr. had originally intended the Billings mansion to be the museum until the fire. Excellent video.
I was just going to ask if those archways are part of the Cloisters? Could see them from the Henry Hudson when we would be going to visit relatives in Yonkers
@@PatricioGarcia1973 I remember a Greek looking portico on street level that overlooked the river nearby. Wonder if that was part of the original estate? Was quite vandalized the last I was up that way. Was glad to see it was rehabilitated ⭐️
@@samanthab1923 it looks like the one in the video, but i dont know if it is the same. The NYC parks dept fixed it up a little, and has a bike trail. Is a nice tourist spot now
Omg, this is so wonderful to see. I grew up in this neighborhood and spent endless amounts of time in this park and in the Cloisters. Loved it always. Such great memories. Thank you!!
Fort Tryon Park is the neighborhood I grew up nearby. My son has two parakeets buried at the park by a lamppost and a stone small building. I ventured to the cloisters on many elementary school trips (P.S. 152). Very fond memories sledding down Devils Hill and walking on the dangerous stone walls that take you up in the park. Exploring that park was an adventure in itself. So nice to hear about the history of the area.
I never considered this area to be part of fort tryon park. It was just castle village when I lived there in 60s, 70s , 80s, 90s and early 2000s. Great job in discovering all the pictures of the estate. Fascinating
Ken, you're really upping the effort lately. These past couple of weeks, the videos have been incredible. Really educational as always. Your reasearch and knowledge are excellent. Thanks!
I recently saw a comment made saying "I want to see the house, why do you have all of the un needed into about the past owners?" I'm thinking that they should go to another channel! Without the inhabitants a home is just a house! Doesn't that commenter wonder "what kind of person/people built something like This?"
Fascinating video, as always. I recognized the C.K.G. Billings name from Chicago but didn't know about his Manhattan house. And then I was surprised, toward the end of the video, to realize I have been to this site when I went to the Met Cloisters!
Having been born in NYC with generations before me, I’d notice these remnants of history. I don’t know much about them. I suppose one isn’t interested in such things when young. The evolution of a City so grand as New York,it’s history is abounding. Thank you so much for all the information you share. It’s well appreciated.
Oh my goodness! The hobby-horse costumes! So funny! Billings was certainly a character. While he provided employment for hundreds of workers, such indulgence doesn't sit well knowing he had squeezed out other utility companies and could control what regular people had to pay. The tower was quite impressive. I'm sorry to learn Rockefeller's dream of a museum came to naught, but what a beautiful location for a park! Thanks for an entertaining story! P.S. I was curious if he had anything to do with Billings, Montana, but apparently the place was named after the Billings who was president of the Northern Pacific Railway. I wondered, as these Robber Barons got around, lol.
Google "The Cloisters Museum". Where the house once stood, JD built a monastery style museum, bringing every stone from various buildings in Europe. Today, The Cloisters houses the main Medieval collection of New Yorks's, Metropolitan Museum of Art.
This ginormous place actually looks pretty livable. Other than having too many chairs placed up against the walls, instead of in cozy groupings, the furnishings look very comfortable. My favorite “rooms” are the bedroom that was shown, the bowling alley, and the indoor pool. I could live with those😅
It would have been nice to see & hear more about the stables ; as a former pro equestrian , I'm interested in the logistics of how the horses were stabled , fed , exercised , etc. at such an unusual location .
I've visited the Cloisters several times and Ft. Tryon Park many times, and walked thru the archway, but I never suspected the site once had such a grand estate there. Thank you!
I you read the later history of Fort Tryon and Rockefeller on this land, they usually do not even cover the guy who spent the first big chunk of money on it. Interesting video.
Down on Broadway there remains a grand arch that was one of the entrances to the property though it is partially hidden by and incorporated into an auto repair shop. Growing up in uptown Manhattan we explored every inch of it as kids. The Metropolitan Museum's Cloisters annex on that land is one of the treasures we had access to and should not be missed by visitors to NYC.
I grew up in that area of Manhattan, Washington Heights/Fort Tryon Park and the Cloisters! I have a few childhood pictures of the great arches on the Hudson River side but never knew the full history of those arches other than some obscure reference to Rockafeller. Thank You *sooo* much for this very informative & interesting history lesson 💚
Wow that was absolutely gorgeous! What a shame that it burned... to have put so much money into building it, but not into the safety aspect of the fire hydrants and hoses is crazy to me. But a very beautiful EPIC "home"/man-cave LOL! Cracks me up that his wife chose to live elsewhere.
Good stuff, been to the Cloisters, fun trip but had a vague idea of its provenance which i could have guessed at in outline, this provides names and history; He was retired at 40 and went out and built his "man-cave" Hey, what's money for? I've also seen the picture of the horse dinner now I connect it to time and place. Thanks.
Grew up in the park..in more ways than one. Was never harrased & was never threatened. I remember Clint Eastwood filming a movie there. Hippies from Englewood Cliffs would come across the river to party. Was all Irish & Italian back then
Boy, I sometimes wish I had extra cash to throw around on other homes when I get bored with my tiny 2200 sq ft house. How can someone get bored when they have an indoor AND outdoor pool plus their own bowling lanes. Then again, wasn't this before the government decided to start collecting income taxes? Aww, disposable income! ( what's that?) 😅😂
Ha! As soon as I saw the video, I recognized the Cloisters. I just want to commend Mr. Rockefeller for giving so much to NYC. He also bought the area across in NJ so that the view across the Hudson would be unobstructed. He also gave the land where the United Nations is now.
How is it that I've been intrested in for years in American mansions and the people who lived in them yet have never heard of this place? --- My favorite part of the mansion is the stair landing that also served as a library. I like seeing a place serve more than one purpose. I work at a university that has a building with one of the staircases at the end of the building. There is a landing with floor to ceiling windows looking right into the branches of a tree. Years ago I would use those stairs and think what a great sitting room that space could be. Now? It's accessible only in the event of an emergency escape, a wonderful space used and enjoyed by no one.
As you drive north on the Henry Hudson Parkway, the left side has columns and portico that are stunning. Unless it was under lock & key however, A mansion would never survive today. Ceiling to floor graffiti. In fact there's graffiti all over the columns.
It never ceases to amuse me that vicious, avaricious social climbing animals will construct literal mausoleums to their egos and vanities, and name any room a “library” that contains more than six book... none of which they’ve read.
As much as this history is interesting, I just can’t imagine that level of greed that so many of these homeowners had. And at the expense of so many underpaid working class people
This man born into a wealthy family did very little work his whole life! Retiring at 40 from a job where he did nothing but collect checks and buy other competitive companies is rather disgusting in my opinion!
I THINK I AM HEARING THINGS????!!!!!!!! DID I HEAR YOU SAY THAT THEY STAGED AN EVENT AT A MANHATTAN RESTAURANT, ON THE 4TH FLOOR, WHERE THEY MADE EVERYONE PRESENT SIT ON HORSES FOR THE EVENT????!!!!!!!! HOW THE HELL DID THEY GET HORSES TO THE 4TH FLOOR????!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
How do you have that much money, build such a magnificent estate and during the construction process, no one plans for the possibility of fire??? And what about the city, doesn't it have safety requirements???
🤨 This story plays out like a 1950's "B Movie". There's absolutely "no chaser" that would help me swallow the description of "Water Hydrants too Far" and "Hoses too Short", or as they say where I reside: "That dog just won't hunt!" Now, maybe the8r Insurance Company bought this ruse, ir the Public, or whomever it was wove to serve, but, (I can not fathom a Man of such extreme means, education, and experience, having designed a System of Fire Control, and having made such elementary and definitively ignorant an error.) There's occassions I must wonder: Do the elite make some public statements just for the pleasure of seeing: "How naive the Public is, or for delighting in particular Reactions?" To have a method 9f obtaining absolute Truths of any given "Subject" in any given "Date/Time" in "History" ... 🔮🪄🎩 Beth Bartlett Sociologist/Behavioralist and Historian Tennessee, USA