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FLAGLER MUSEUM Whitehall's Two-Year
Restoration Captures The Grandeur Of The Original 1902 Estate
Text Katharine Kaye McMillan
Photography Courtesy of the Flagler Museum, Palm Beach, FL
 ABOVE: Whitehall's symmetrical architecture
references Neoclassic styling. The museum's recent two-year restoration project
returned the Gilded Age estate to its original glory. |
pon its unveiling in 1902, Whitehall was
heralded as "more wonderful than any palace in Europe, grander and more
magnificent than any other private dwelling in the world."
Today, after the completion of an
extensive two-year restoration, the same can be said once again about the
Gilded Age estate in Palm Beach, which Henry Morrison Flagler built as a
wedding present for his third wife, Mary Lily. It's the first time Whitehall
has been restored inside and out since it was built more than a century ago.
A feat of American innovation
during its time, Whitehall was constructed over an 18-month period
though its exquisite craftsmanship and decoration would suggest otherwise.
Designed by Beaux-Arts architects John Carrére and Thomas Hastings, the
55-room mansion married 20th-century technology with Western culture.
"Europeans admired American technological and scientific innovations but
decried their lack of culture and arts," Executive Director John Blades says.
"Whitehall was intended to communicate that Americans could merge great
architecture with modem innovations."
 ABOVE: The Grand Hall features seven
varieties of marble and three ceiling paintings depicting the "Crowning of
Knowledge,"
"Happiness" and "Prosperity" by Benvenuti.
BELOW: The Louis XV-style Grand Ballroom
was once the site of the Bal Poudré - the highlight of the season during
Whitehall's heyday, according to Sandra Barghini, the museum's chief
curator.
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To this end, Flagler, who was
known for his love of technology, added indoor plumbing and lighting,
electricity, telephones, and central heating to the design rare
amenities in that era.
Built as a winter retreat for the
Flaglers, Whitehall was also a seasonal resort for many Gilded Age barons from
1903 to 1917. "Whitehall's Bal Poudré, held on Washington's Birthday,
was the highlight of the season," Chief Curator Sandra Barghini says. "Its 14
guestrooms, decorated in the Victorian-style of the day by Pottier & Stymus
(the most fashionable decorators in New York), were always full."
Flagler died in 1913, and after
the passing of Mary Lily in 1917, Whitehall was left to Mary Lily's niece. She
sold it in 1925, and soon after, it reopened as the Whitehall Hotel. For the
next 10 years, the original structure became a shadow of its former self as
many of its contents were given away or sold.
So when Flagler's granddaughter,
Jean Flagler Matthews, purchased the building and founded the Flagler Museum in
1959, few of the original art and furnishings remained. Over the decades,
Florida's heat, humidity and insects wreaked havoc, threatening to destroy the
treasured monument's modern-day innovations.
Hope of restoring the historic
monurnent to its original grandeur, however, was never lost. Blades, who was a
former staff member at Hearst Castle, formed a comprehensive plan to ensure
Whitehall's future as a national historic landmark.
"Our first step in the two-year,
$5 million restoration program was the installation of a state-of-the-art
climate control system to keep humidity at 55 percent," Blades says.
Thankfully, Flagler's foresight in installing central heating allowed for
retrofitting of the system. ...continued
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