Seaview Terrace, also known as the Carey Mansion, in Newport, Rhode Island. |
Unlike Collinwood, Seaview Terrace was not built in the 18th century. It was completed in 1925 by Edson Bradley, president since 1882 of W. A. Gaines & Co., makers of the most successful bourbon of the Gilded Age, Old Crow.
The Old Crow enterprise was begun in Versailles, Kentucky by James Crow, a distiller; Oscar Pepper, a farmer/distiller; and a local banker, E. H. Taylor. The business was reorganized several times, usually after a death, such as Crow's in 1856, and Pepper's in 1865. Taylor found two new investors, one of whom was William Gaines. The new firm was called W. A. Gaines & Co., and he became its president. His death shuffled the deck again, although his name would remain on company letterhead to the end and appears on the Old Crow label to this day.
Old Crow was very successful, but a growing whiskey company constantly needs more capital. Taylor found it at a New York investment firm. In 1870, Taylor exited the company, selling his interest to the president of that firm, George Allen. After Gaines died, the president of Allen's New York investment firm also became president of W. A. Gaines & Co. Bradley took the reins in 1882 and held the job until Prohibition put them out of business in 1920.
But Bradley was, by then, already crazy-rich. A New Yorker, he had moved to Washington, D. C. to be closer to the government that was increasingly sticking its nose into his whiskey business. In 1907, he built a French-Gothic mansion on the south side of Dupont Circle. It covered more than half a city block, and included a Gothic chapel with seating for 150, a large ballroom, an art gallery, and a 500-seat theatre.
The onset of National Prohibition disgusted Bradley so he decided to quit Washington for Newport, Rhode Island, but he liked his house, so he took it with him. Disassembly began in 1923. He added it to an existing mansion, known as Sea View, completing the combined house in 1925. He died in 1935, age 83. His descendants kept the house until the 1940s. It has had many owners since but is still privately owned.
Old Crow money built at least one other grand house, in Frankfort, Kentucky. That story is here.
Nothing now is the way it was back then, but people still chase whiskey fortunes.
As always, Col. Cowdery, I absolutely love your historical vignettes about Bourbon and the folx who have made it... or been notorious for some other reason. Thanx for this post with the pic. I showed my wife the pic and she instantly recognized the house as 'Collinwood'. She was a huge fan of Dark Shadows.
ReplyDeleteInteresting slice of history, Chuck. Unfortunately, I don't think the Old Crow brand has held it's value/prestige/whatever as well as the mansion has.
ReplyDeleteI'll repost my (trivial) comment as it wasn't posted for some reason (probably my fault).
ReplyDeleteInteresting bit of bourbon history, as usual, Chuck. It's a shame that the legacy of the Old Crow brand hasn't been as carefully attended to as the mansion appears to be.