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- Location: Market St. Power Plant (view comments)
- Gallery: Rivets
- Location: Pilgrim State Hospital (view comments)
- Gallery: The Power Plant
- Location: Pilgrim State Hospital (view comments)
- Gallery: The Power Plant
- Location: Broadacres Hospital (view comments)
- Gallery: Meet the Neighbors
best one yet, that may be the time of year.
- Location: Bennett School for Girls (view comments)
- Gallery: Close Calls
- Location: Bennett School for Girls (view comments)
- Gallery: Close Calls
Where A R E You? Bless. May You always be well is the wish.
- Location: Tamarack Lodge (view comments)
- Gallery: The Moss Museum
Iceberg, I was aware of that collapse in the east wing, but I had no idea it was to that extent. God bless balloon framing, I guess. Letting the interior take the full brunt of deterioration while the exterior keeps up appearances is the reason why she still looks as good as she does. Still, I had no idea that things had gotten that bad. I have to admit that even for me, the self-described patron saint of lost causes when it comes to Bennett, that's too much. There was no way that Halcyon could've been anything but demolished after that collapse.
Pat, you're right that it looks better with Alumnae Hall torn down. The wrecking crew rolled Halcyon back to its 1926 configuration, with the exception of the library, by tearing it down. Still though, when Bennett was still running, it didn't look all that bad. The stucco matched Halcyon's paint then, and it didn't look completely terrible. I'd like to also dispute your point that they built it just to hide Halcyon from the street. I remembered seeing that it was planned a good fifteen years before the road was shifted to its current configuration, and found posts from the Growing up in Millbrook, NY Facebook page that matched.
https://imgur.com/a/9LPbrf2
I wasn't in the Bennett administration back then, but if I had to take a guess, they chose to put it there because its location is equidistant from both wings of Halcyon and it was a spot where it would be relatively unobtrusive, at the time. Still, if I were in the Bennett administration, I think I would've tried to make it match Halcyon in more than color alone. As far as preserving the remaining stonework is concerned, yes, I'm also optimistic about the chances of preserving most, if not all of the major parts of it. I believe they'll easily be able to save that huge corner foundation beneath the porch. It looks pretty sturdy to me. The chimneys will have to come down, at least to a reasonable level where they can't be blown over, or kill someone if they fall. The biggest uncertainty for me has to be the stone arches of the porch that connect the foundation to the wooden mass of the west wing. I'm unsure if they can be saved, but I'll give the demo team a gold medal if they can manage it, as I'd really like for them to still be there. If and when any stones are knocked loose, I'd like to see them either made into some type of rock garden, or preserved for future use in the restoration of other Millbrook estates. No souvenirs for me. That whole business is beginning to remind me of the stories of Bennett's bankruptcy sale, and I'd not like to see a repeat of that.
Speaking of, I've found a whole bunch of news articles, magazines, and other odds and ends of paperwork like the two I posted above. If you'd like to see them posted, just let me know.
- Location: Bennett School for Girls (view comments)
- Gallery: Close Calls
- Location: Lyman School for Boys (view comments)
- Gallery: Following Old Footsteps
- Location: Nesponsit Health Care Center (view comments)
- Gallery: Saline
The Victorian Era / Gilded Age writ large certainly deserves its earned share of social critique, but it took the hippie era of the 1960's, like so many other examples, to rediscover the artistic wonders of that time. The same way the 'hippie' era was the driving force in the rediscovery and artistic and critical re-evaluation of the Art Nouveau art movement, and the Pre-Raphealites, for example. It demonstrates in a very ironic way, how the hippies stood for more time honored, traditional, and actually [gasp!] conservative values, aesthetically anyway. They kickstarted the revival of SO many art forms, made antiquing a "thing" for everybody, not just snobs, kickstarted the Preservation movement, and elevated Craft back to the level of Art, where it always belonged.
But they were one generation skipped on the timeline from being older and in power enough to save a place like this. I feel if it was people now deciding back when it was feasible, the outcome here may have been quite different, but just a selah what-if from the drawing boards of my distracted mind.
So...where was I? Oh yeah, the hippies were cool, mostly, Halycon Hall rules, the Gilded Age was rad as shit, but I'm glad I didn't have to live through it, unless of course I was loaded, but back then you could lose it all real quick, like the guy who built Halcyon, who lived out his days in a tiny cottage a third of a mile away. Imagine what he thought passing it by all the time afterwards. I bet he laughed his ass off.
If actual demolition is imminent, it is important that the stonework be saved where possible. There was a state order in place to do so, signed by a judge back when demo-ing was the predicate for a horrible condo plan that was thankfully rejected finally. I feel the new park deserves at least the same protection guarantee of this historic resource, and would hope [guess? speculate? extemporize? spew?] unless officially rescinded, that that order is still binding and relevant. I try to just keep reminding on that point, I think it's important.
I am optimistic that some large degree of care is in fact being taken, in planning and execution, but crazy shit happens knocking down big old crazy shit. So it is actually a crucial thing right now, as the long record of historical "what-if"s for this place, comes down to the final and only choice, that is, how much of the stonework can be saved as part of a park terrace. In tribute to the amazing artisans who built Millbrook, figuratively, and literally, as much as possible should be everyone's hope and aim, within the limits that physical gravity will allow such stone survival. Stone Survival. That sounds like a heavy metal record...
I bet there will be a few boulders strewn about if people wanted a souvenier, though. Maybe they could sell chips off stones, like relics, to raise money. Then there would be a ripe market for Fake/ Counterfeit Halcyon Memorabilia!
My own coveted fantasy football component has long rotted to unrecognizability. It was [still is!] a singular column, High Edwardian, elaborately carved scrollwork, about 5 feet high. It holds up the tiny balconette built into the main east wing office suite. In the original magazine feature from the 1890's it merited its own illustration, even.
Just a lone concentratedly detailed architectural component. But long since rendered feast for the termite kingdom. By now, just a stump, which would likely crumble in hand. Hell, it wasn't even load bearing, I should have climbed up and cut that thing out of there back in the 90's!
Ah, what if?
- Location: Bennett School for Girls (view comments)
- Gallery: Close Calls
- Location: Hasard Cheratte (Coal Mine) (view comments)
- Gallery: Deterioration
- Location: Hasard Cheratte (Coal Mine) (view comments)
- Gallery: Deterioration