The Vanderbilt-Twombly Florham Estate

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  • Опубліковано 24 вер 2016
  • Edited with voiceover for review.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 185

  • @rayoster2872
    @rayoster2872 2 роки тому +22

    As a child in the 1950’s, my aunt took me to the estate sale of the Twombley’s. I remember being awed by all the fabulous furnishings, all being tagged for the auction. I especially remember all the doors on the main floor. They were very thick and tall, possibly 12 or 14 feet . At the time I thought what a shame those beautiful dark wooden doors were to be removed and sold.
    Fairleigh Dickinson University purchased the estate some time thereafter and in 1968, I went to night school there and was delighted to see the doors still intact. I am now 74 and have very fond memories of that time.

    • @1940limited
      @1940limited Рік тому

      Yes, the doors are still intact, but the huge front door somehow disappeared. No one seems to know where it went. I remember many of the homes on millionaire's row being sold off or demolished. I always hated seeing that.

  • @chuckandmax7313
    @chuckandmax7313 2 роки тому +12

    I can’t even begin to imagine what it would be like to live on this estate, no words can describe what it must have felt like to have a orchid presented to you 4 times a day and having Lillie’s named after you. Never having to worry about how you were going to pay the bills or scrub a floor, dripping in jewels and couture gowns that you only wear for an hour and never wear again. The Vanderbilt’s all lived unimaginable lives far beyond even the queen of England

  • @paulbrunelle1444
    @paulbrunelle1444 11 місяців тому

    Beautifully preserved movie of the Florham estate.

  • @supafrancis
    @supafrancis 7 років тому +69

    I went to college on this estate. When I first walked on the grounds as a Freshman in the year 2000, I knew that this was a special place. Imagine living out your crazy college years on one of the nicest estates in the country... a place fit to wow the richest of the rich. I was just a young man and it was an amazing setting. I played soccer and tennis there, I even watched the smoke billow from the twin towers looking off the back wall of the gardens that overlook the Hudson to NYC. So many memories.

    • @lcarter602
      @lcarter602 6 років тому +4

      It says the property was in Convent (Station), NJ, which is nowhere in sight of the Hudson River, yes? no?

    • @macarthurfield5674
      @macarthurfield5674 6 років тому +2

      Lucky dog !!!

    • @ryancatlin4799
      @ryancatlin4799 4 роки тому

      you can't see the hudson or the twin towers from fdu dumbass.

    • @lgreen2487
      @lgreen2487 3 роки тому +1

      Id love to hear some of your stories

    • @supafrancis
      @supafrancis 3 роки тому +12

      @@lgreen2487 Oh the stories i could tell.... one of my best friends from college has even says that I should write a book about how crazy my time was on that campus! and as for all these idiots who say that you cant see the city from FDU, well I was there and from the back of the mansion on sept 11th 2001, IF you were THERE.. you certainly could see the miles long trail of smoke coming from the fallen towers. It's am image that will stay burnt in my mind for the rest of my life... so the best I can say to all yu know it all's is that if you werent there to se it, then you cant comment on whether or not it it is true or not! Though as unfortunate as it was, I WAS there on that day and all that stood on the other side of the tree's at the back of the mansion and saw it as well can attest that I speak the truth

  • @mchristman6932
    @mchristman6932 3 роки тому +8

    What a treat for historians. Thanks to a french chef, and his wife.

  • @andrewbrendan1579
    @andrewbrendan1579 3 роки тому +12

    Very interesting! Thank you for sharing this time capsule treasure. I read the book about the Vanderbilts, "Fortune's Children" by Arthur Vanderbilt and part of the book is about the Twomblys. The whole book is fascinating reading I highly recommend for those interested in American social history.

  • @thevanderbilts860
    @thevanderbilts860 3 роки тому +11

    Thank you for passing this, very interesting!

  • @bethbartlett5692
    @bethbartlett5692 2 роки тому +4

    It's a real piece of history, this short film offers, and a novice filming without a Production Crew makes it even more authentic.
    I'm sure a narration absent in judgemental innuendos could enhance the experience and allow for a copy to be filed for the annuals of the Guilded Age.
    Thank you for sharing.

    • @1940limited
      @1940limited Рік тому

      I wish they'd filmed more of the buildings than so much of the driveway, but it's still a great film and all we have. The Twombly's themselves never bothered to film it.

  • @tracypfeifer12
    @tracypfeifer12 3 роки тому +12

    I went to college at St. Elizabeth’s next door. Beautiful building and area!

  • @dominiquemcdowell88
    @dominiquemcdowell88 3 роки тому +30

    Regarding the staff, seems to be a prime example of treating people well so that they’ll take care of your business or in this case your estate and yourself.

    • @North49191
      @North49191 3 роки тому +1

      really? no member of staff was ever allowed to make eye contact with any family member.do some research she was a self indulgent bitch

    • @andersisaac7511
      @andersisaac7511 2 роки тому

      I dont mean to be so offtopic but does anyone know a trick to log back into an Instagram account..?
      I somehow lost the password. I would love any assistance you can give me!

    • @harleyphoenix3301
      @harleyphoenix3301 2 роки тому

      @Anders Isaac instablaster :)

    • @andersisaac7511
      @andersisaac7511 2 роки тому

      @Harley Phoenix i really appreciate your reply. I got to the site thru google and im trying it out atm.
      Seems to take a while so I will reply here later with my results.

    • @andersisaac7511
      @andersisaac7511 2 роки тому

      @Harley Phoenix It worked and I now got access to my account again. I am so happy:D
      Thanks so much you really help me out :D

  • @1940limited
    @1940limited Рік тому

    This reminds me so much of many of the big old mansions that stood on Madison Ave into the 60s. We used to explore them and run around the grounds. It was fascinating. I love shutters on all the windows. Notice two windows have them closed in the front of the house for some reason. One house I knew had cranks inside so the shutters could be closed from inside without opening the window. The shutters have long since been removed from Florham. I guess they'd be maintenance headache now. If you visit the house today you can still see the remnants of the latches that held them in place on each side of every window.

  • @carowells1607
    @carowells1607 6 років тому +29

    I remember reading about how many servants the Twombleys employed. One man's only job was to polish the silver, and another man was tasked with raking decorative patterns into the gravel in the stables

    • @michaelmullin3585
      @michaelmullin3585 3 роки тому +7

      It takes a lot of time and effort to polish real silver, especially if there is a lot of it.

    • @marthaross6301
      @marthaross6301 3 роки тому +4

      Polishing silver is relaxing

    • @moonraker30
      @moonraker30 3 роки тому +5

      It took 100 people to keep this place running smoothly

    • @1940limited
      @1940limited Рік тому

      One woman's job was to polish the silver door knobs throughout the house daily. You wouldn't think they'd een need to be polished that often but supposedly it's what she did day in and day out. Where would you find someone to do that today?

    • @1940limited
      @1940limited Рік тому

      @@moonraker30 I heard 120 and 135. Not sure of the exact number.

  • @1940limited
    @1940limited 7 років тому +19

    Those people certainly knew how to live. I'm glad this film is preserved. it's too bad more like it weren't made. I would like to have seen the garage and the cars as well as inside the mansion and the railroad siding. It would also be nice to see the other great mansions that lined Madison Ave. about this time. A friend whose mother knew Margureite Keasbey remembers when she'd come calling at their house off Franklin St., in Morristown. I remember well Ms. Keasbey's home, too. 151 Madison Ave. It's still there. I moved to Morristown in 1956, a year too late to have seen Florham as a private residence. I wonder how they heated the place when it was new? With no air conditioning, I bet it wasn't all that comfortable a home in the summertime! :-)

    • @janicesullivan8942
      @janicesullivan8942 3 роки тому +1

      There was a PBS program about some of America’s greatest estates.

  • @charliedavenport9609
    @charliedavenport9609 3 роки тому +2

    Such a fantastic estate! A great film!

  • @superd9072
    @superd9072 3 роки тому +6

    This was amazing! Thanks for this!

  • @pimhoff
    @pimhoff 2 роки тому +1

    I grew up in Florham Park. My parents and I would often drive through the estate in the early 1960s on the way back from Rod's Ranch House after dinner. It was pretty mystical on a summer evening with the top down on the convertible. It was still pretty much like this video at that time. There was no thought of security in those days and you could just wander around. I remember being in the main house and on the patio with the breathtaking view. Must have been in the summer when FDU wasn't in session. My father always said that it was a scaled-down version of Hampton Court, obviously, he was only partially right.

    • @1940limited
      @1940limited Рік тому

      How's Rod's doing these days. I moved from Morristown in 1983 and haven't been back too much.

  • @dalewhittenberger8833
    @dalewhittenberger8833 3 роки тому +20

    With today’s technology, a color upgrade would make this video a. stunning historical educational tool for today’s youth

    • @1940limited
      @1940limited Рік тому

      Do you think they'd appreciate it?

  • @BallymurphyBabe
    @BallymurphyBabe 2 роки тому +1

    I wish this was in the colour so I could see the true beauty of all the flowers.

  • @chuckandmax7313
    @chuckandmax7313 2 роки тому +3

    1000 acres for a single country residence, amazing, the luxurious lifestyles of the rich in the gilded age is unimaginable to comprehend. Everywhere you look is beautifully tailored and manicured and beyond compare, the worlds richest men today can’t even scratch the surface of the amount of opulence these robber barons were surrounded by, and no amount of money can recreate the gilded age.

  • @myleftthumb2294
    @myleftthumb2294 2 роки тому +2

    I'm surprised it's not abandoned and rotting away like many of these mansions unfortunately are now. For example, Lynnwood hall north of Philly.

  • @enny7617
    @enny7617 2 роки тому +2

    Went to FDU in 1959 2nd year after they bought estate. The Orangerie still existed which they turned into a library. There was a coach house and garage building with upstairs living quarters for chauffeurs. That was turned into a science building. They also had a playhouse with indoor swimming pool and indoor clay tennis court. The pool had tropical murals painted on the walls and ceiling with a mirrored fireplace at one end. The women's dorm was in the mansion using the original bedrooms some with fireplaces and the men's dorm was in the servants quarters which was attached to the main house. There was a pipe organ on the main floor which was tuned and repaired while I was there. A private train station was also on the property. This all belonged to a granddaughter of Cornelius Vanderbilt who also had homes in NYC and Newport. It was very easy to pretend that you were a rich teenager living the life. Somewhere online is a more recent documentary about Fairleigh Dickinson and the Twombly Estate.

    • @1940limited
      @1940limited Рік тому

      I've never seen any traces of the railroad siding that went into the place. It's my understanding carloads of coal were brought in to heat the house in winter. I wonder how many of the fireplaces were actually used?

  • @lindahedman3115
    @lindahedman3115 3 роки тому +1

    Very beautiful

  • @davidmtwombly4647
    @davidmtwombly4647 7 років тому +39

    I am a descent of the Twombly's because they are my many great grandparents and I am a Twombly myself.

    • @gnash64
      @gnash64 3 роки тому +5

      You likely descend from Mr. Twombly's brother, Alexander, but not Hamilton Twombly as his only son died (drowned) at age 18, without heirs. This couple's descendants, through their daughter, have the surname Burden.

    • @NelsonClick
      @NelsonClick 3 роки тому +7

      The Florham estate has been a source of fascination for me for many years. It's a lifestyle that can never be reprised. Honestly, sending you this text makes me feel a tad closer to all that history. LOL. Thank you.

    • @jhb61249
      @jhb61249 3 роки тому +3

      I am a descendent too. But I was never descent.

    • @agataneumann9980
      @agataneumann9980 3 роки тому +2

      You need to work on your English

    • @jhb61249
      @jhb61249 3 роки тому +2

      @@agataneumann9980 bet you descended from the decent!

  • @rosalindbruno1816
    @rosalindbruno1816 2 роки тому +2

    I went to the college next to this estate (St. Elizabeth University). This was a beautiful property.

  • @narvelancoleman8597
    @narvelancoleman8597 2 роки тому +1

    Beautiful footage...but Ha! I guess the french chef was as much of a 'hoity toity snob,' with the best of them! Calling to the NY Office, instructing them to instruct the gardener (who I'm sure was easily accessible); as to what he required from the food gardens on the estate, for preparation of meals! How absolutely PRETENTIOUS!

    • @1940limited
      @1940limited Рік тому

      The French chef followed Mr.s Twombly everywhere she went. I don't know if he was in residence when this film was made.

  • @youngjo1jy
    @youngjo1jy 2 роки тому +3

    I went to college here as well in the 80's. Met my wife in a classroom that was one story over the service entrance. 2 of our girls went/go to Salve Regina in Newport that now owns Florence Twombly summer cottage, Vinland as well as living across the street from the Breakers.

  • @mzmiller52
    @mzmiller52 2 роки тому +1

    Route 124 was loaded with mansions. There a few left in Madison. Madison then became the rose city. Town hall was donated by ggeraldine dodge in memory of her son. The train station resembles the town hall across the street. Two houses in the area were designer showcases during the last decade.

  • @allenlivera1611
    @allenlivera1611 3 роки тому +6

    Who would ever downvote this fascinating video?

  • @flicewatter
    @flicewatter 2 роки тому +1

    Awesome 👌

  • @johnmyers7008
    @johnmyers7008 3 роки тому +1

    Lovely!

  • @JkcBrewer
    @JkcBrewer 3 роки тому +8

    No taxes back then.

  • @discernthetimes6798
    @discernthetimes6798 2 роки тому +1

    These places was left there after the reset! These horse and buggy ppl didn’t have the technology to build such a marvel

  • @Engelhafen
    @Engelhafen 3 роки тому +6

    Those lions are so small they’re hardly noticeable.

    • @toddh377
      @toddh377 3 роки тому +1

      A spiritualist visited the grounds before construction on the mansion began and received communication from the great beyond that the lions needed to be small for them to be moved to Oregon in the future.

  • @johnwright2911
    @johnwright2911 2 роки тому +1

    Cross country trip back then would have been miserable, especially for the maid.

    • @1940limited
      @1940limited Рік тому

      Supposedly they did make one trip like that. Mr.s Twombly was worried about being kidnapped.

  • @63bplumb
    @63bplumb 3 роки тому +13

    The American version of Downton Abbey

  • @marshmellow3110
    @marshmellow3110 3 роки тому +5

    The level of wealth is staggering. What a life they led.

    • @DanielPerez-ee3wp
      @DanielPerez-ee3wp 3 роки тому +2

      They always had to watch their backs

    • @1940limited
      @1940limited Рік тому

      It was one of three houses they owned although I think this was the grandest. They only stayed there Spring and Fall.

  • @dmmchugh3714
    @dmmchugh3714 2 роки тому +1

    Is this home still standing ? I know this area well, but can't picture the location.

    • @eval.sturchio2351
      @eval.sturchio2351 Рік тому

      Yes, it is part of Fairleigh Dickinson University and the university still has the entrance on Madison Avenue in Madison.

  • @venitaalbertson4633
    @venitaalbertson4633 2 роки тому +1

    Thisisa grand place . lol ve to live theirs

  • @barbarawenger7161
    @barbarawenger7161 3 роки тому +5

    Another era,another set of social awareness bolstered by other philosophies.

  • @mzmiller52
    @mzmiller52 2 роки тому +1

    Thank God for McKim Meade and white. Geniuses a shame so little is left.

    • @1940limited
      @1940limited Рік тому

      Some People have said this house wasn't one of their best designs. Damned if I can find anything wrong with it!

  • @edgrossman9060
    @edgrossman9060 3 роки тому +10

    Labor was cheap and available to maintain these outrageous homes

    • @tchidell123
      @tchidell123 3 роки тому +7

      Ed Grossman well that maybe but the people were glad to have a job!

    • @1940limited
      @1940limited Рік тому

      You could hire someone who was honest, hard working and reliable for about $10/week.

  • @darren340
    @darren340 3 роки тому +2

    I have never heard of this estate. Amazing
    I am surprised that one comment from a student implies that the property looked out over the Hudson ...???????????

    • @jamesclendon4811
      @jamesclendon4811 3 роки тому +2

      He was misunderstood. He said he could see the smoke from the World Trade Center on 9/11, not that he could see the Hudson. New Jersey is quite flat and the mansion was built on a hill of sorts--I'm sure he could see the smoke; Manhattan is not very far away. Possibly, depending on how the land lays and tree growth he could have even seen the towers themselves--they were visible in certain spots for quite a distance, on clear days.

    • @enny7617
      @enny7617 2 роки тому +1

      Madison, NJ to Manhattan straight line is 22 miles.

    • @1940limited
      @1940limited Рік тому

      The place is in Northern NJ. You might have been able to see the NY Skyline from the back porch, but I'm not sure.

  • @omygod9062
    @omygod9062 3 роки тому +2

    Very cosy

  • @falconinflight6235
    @falconinflight6235 3 роки тому +3

    The NJ government employees appreciated the taxes then and now.

  • @ericswain4177
    @ericswain4177 2 роки тому +1

    Wow ! The unrestrained decadence !

  • @TimoBrown79
    @TimoBrown79 3 роки тому +22

    The chef sounds like a huge snob.

    • @Engelhafen
      @Engelhafen 3 роки тому +2

      Well read about some of the hotel chefs at the time. It was a prestigious position.

    • @StephieGsrEvolution
      @StephieGsrEvolution 3 роки тому +3

      @@Engelhafen still no excuse to be a snob

    • @Engelhafen
      @Engelhafen 3 роки тому +1

      @@StephieGsrEvolution well I tend to be a bit more tolerant of talent and we all have our hubris

    • @StephieGsrEvolution
      @StephieGsrEvolution 3 роки тому +1

      @@Engelhafen 🙄 No, we all don't have that level of hubris!

    • @lesliemoore2644
      @lesliemoore2644 3 роки тому +1

      Talented, intelligent people often are

  • @DonalDocRavioli
    @DonalDocRavioli 3 роки тому +4

    Well, David, very interesting. An amazing look into the past. Obviously, your nose isn't high in the air it appears. Being of French royal descent, I in the French case can see why their heads were surgically detached shall we say. Their workers were nothing more than slaves, you might say they lost their heads over the matter. But it's amazing how many massive homes are abandoned all over the Earth.

    • @dd_2023
      @dd_2023 2 роки тому +2

      YES! Mud flood ruins, renovated by Industrialists!

  • @macarthurfield5674
    @macarthurfield5674 6 років тому +25

    Those were the days when people took pride in their work. No living off the government for them, NO welfare, NO food stamps, NO hand outs, NO whining, NO complaining, just plain hard work. I'm sure there are still people like that today. But I'm thinking Pride is in short supply. I know there were no programs to help the less fortunate, back then. Maybe that's why people had pride, huh?? Either way, this is a fantastic walk back in history. Thank you for sharing !!

    • @prometheus5700
      @prometheus5700 6 років тому +18

      The good old days when you were basically owned by the railroad you worked for. When company goons would bash your head in for asking for better wages and working conditions. I'm not for handouts, but I'm not delusional enough to call them the good old days either. They were good for a very small few.

    • @richcincotta6702
      @richcincotta6702 3 роки тому +10

      Also before the days of income tax!! That's what put a end to that era!!! Not the good old days at all. Robber barons.

    • @prairiedoggy1
      @prairiedoggy1 3 роки тому +9

      Yes, now we mainly have programs to help the more fortunate.

    • @StephieGsrEvolution
      @StephieGsrEvolution 3 роки тому +5

      Capitalism only survives when subsidized. The rich are the only welfare queens.

    • @lisareed5669
      @lisareed5669 2 роки тому +1

      You are a fool.

  • @TheFiown
    @TheFiown 3 роки тому +15

    Less taxes meant more employement and more spending, a more logical approach but one that doesn't seem to interest governements!

    • @nancyloomis3046
      @nancyloomis3046 3 роки тому +5

      If it were only that simple.

    • @StephieGsrEvolution
      @StephieGsrEvolution 3 роки тому +2

      Oh the tired old trickle down theory! Yeah that has never worked out well for most of the Earth's population.
      The rich use the commons the most to make their money, of course they should pay their share. These days, they hoard money instead of spending it, but something tells me you already know this.

    • @StephieGsrEvolution
      @StephieGsrEvolution 3 роки тому

      @nunya inct you know nothing about me. Calm your tits, bootlicker!

    • @sparkynm156
      @sparkynm156 3 роки тому +1

      Well, 30 YEARS of Corrupt Democrats and Globalists.. Chasing Off, Attacking, Harassing, Over Taxing, Over Regulating , Murder, and colluding with China to Subsidize Chinese Factories to manufacture and sell Products into the American Markets for FAR LESS THAN THE COST OF MANUFACTURING...to compete directly with specifically chosen Industries and Businesses.. one by one over and over to Decimate and Replace Everyone.. Business after Business and Industry after Industry... Even buying the Bankrupted Shell and Using the Name and selling off or Shipping the Equipment and tooling overseas..
      Cities, Towns, Related and Supporting Industries and Infrastructures Decimated.. The Buildings Raised so they can Never be used again.. Steel Mills , Metal Foundries, Chemical Plants, etc Shuddered..
      And thats just the Tip of One if Many Agendas.. England Finally after Hundreds of Years is Taking a Final Run at Their Prize.. They run Many Countries from the shadows.. One of only a couple entities that Continue to Fool the Masses into Aiding in Bringing Their Own Countries..Or Turning Countries against Each other by convincing each that the other is attacking them or murdered Higher Ups and such..
      It goes on..

    • @StephieGsrEvolution
      @StephieGsrEvolution 3 роки тому +1

      @@sparkynm156 both parties are extremely corrupt!
      What you're going on about are problems perpetuated by a corrupt system. Instead of everyone acknowledging and appreciating our interconnectedness and having healthy competition, we a have a race to the bottom for hyper-competition and greed that leaves most scrambling in the filth for crumbs while a few hide in their hoards.

  • @mcashnv
    @mcashnv 2 роки тому +1

    Sad, really. I'd wager the Twombly's would have received more joy by using some their squandered fortune building orphanages and interacting with the children they helped. And I have nothing against acquiring wealth.

    • @1940limited
      @1940limited Рік тому

      They probably could have done that and still built this place!

  • @traceydelfs2657
    @traceydelfs2657 3 роки тому +4

    It sounds like a speech impediment every time I hear tWombly😅

    • @1940limited
      @1940limited Рік тому

      A friend of mine is adamant that the name is pronounced Tomb-lee.

  • @judemetz8963
    @judemetz8963 3 роки тому +8

    THIS is how they threw their money away during the Great Depression? As much as I enjoy this bit of history, my interest was changed to anger when the timeline came into focus. The filthy rich, completely divorced from the rest of humanity. Disgusting!

    • @nocount1
      @nocount1 3 роки тому +2

      This was built late 19th century, long before the depression.

    • @12011954s
      @12011954s 2 роки тому +2

      You said it yourself…their money.

    • @kathleencaffrey1716
      @kathleencaffrey1716 2 роки тому +1

      @@12011954s there’s a reason the tax rate was increased.

    • @1940limited
      @1940limited Рік тому

      The place was built in the late 1890s way before the depression.

  • @NelsonClick
    @NelsonClick Рік тому +1

    How many people (besides me) believe the daughter; Ruth was a lesbian? I have zero proof and I admit it's all supposition and instinct but she was pretty, smart, adored her Mother, never married and loved Paris. I rest my case.

    • @1940limited
      @1940limited Рік тому

      That's the rumor that's been around since forever.All I know is she never married but took care of the family homes until her death in 1955. If I had to bet Id' say she was a lesbo.

  • @watchtower1014
    @watchtower1014 3 роки тому +3

    looks like an apartment building.

    • @1940limited
      @1940limited Рік тому

      Ha! I've never seen an apartment building looking like that. shutters on all the windows?

  • @DanielPerez-ee3wp
    @DanielPerez-ee3wp 3 роки тому

    Mermaid took the first hit for her?

  • @North49191
    @North49191 3 роки тому +3

    meanwhile back in town thousands are out of work and starving

    • @1940limited
      @1940limited Рік тому

      It wasn't' that bad in Morristown and the surrounding area. It was all pretty affluent.

  • @carls.1000
    @carls.1000 3 роки тому +15

    A ridiculous lifestyle that could never be maintained nor enjoyed.

    • @StephieGsrEvolution
      @StephieGsrEvolution 3 роки тому

      @nunya inct 😂 you mean THE FRUITS OF THE LABOR THAT ACTUAL LABORERS PRODUCED!

    • @StephieGsrEvolution
      @StephieGsrEvolution 3 роки тому

      @nunya inct 🤣 I studied economics, among other things in school and still do.
      Even that capitalist libertarian BS you're spewing.

    • @StephieGsrEvolution
      @StephieGsrEvolution 3 роки тому +1

      Not concerned with proper grammar in a UA-cam comment section.
      And who are you calling unskilled/uneducated? Most workers know more/do way more about doing the actual work than the bosses.

    • @1940limited
      @1940limited Рік тому

      Looks to me as if they're doing just fine.

    • @carls.1000
      @carls.1000 Рік тому

      @@1940limited The mansion is now part of a college and the richest Vanderbilt is Anderson Cooper...nuff said

  • @tonycash8544
    @tonycash8544 2 роки тому

    Draining a marsh on top of a hill?

  • @executivewoman678
    @executivewoman678 3 роки тому +2

    Ain't this the news reporters family. Gloria's son what's his name??

    • @melanielazare9
      @melanielazare9 3 роки тому

      That's what I thought too

    • @lesliemoore2644
      @lesliemoore2644 3 роки тому +1

      Anderson Cooper

    • @dd_2023
      @dd_2023 2 роки тому +1

      @@lesliemoore2644 And, his brother Kathy Griffin

  • @jamiejohnson8817
    @jamiejohnson8817 2 роки тому +3

    “Swamp”? That means wetlands. So, they drained wetlands and put in lawns and non-native trees. Mahogany door - a species of wood that’s now threatened. This is a spectacular house and property. And it’s everything we now understand to have been an unfortunate mindset.

    • @fatfreddy4176
      @fatfreddy4176 2 роки тому +3

      Wah.

    • @1940limited
      @1940limited Рік тому

      Can't agree with you on that I'd be very happy living here. The mahogany front door disappeared long ago. No One seems to know where it went.I heard it was 6" thick and only the butler was allowed to open and close it.

  • @carolinemaja2199
    @carolinemaja2199 2 роки тому +1

    These overly rich are sickening.

    • @1940limited
      @1940limited Рік тому

      Sour grapes on you. They earned it.

  • @seanthorton3054
    @seanthorton3054 3 роки тому +3

    Crooks & Castles

  • @jackiebailey6253
    @jackiebailey6253 3 роки тому +13

    Robber barons

    • @1940limited
      @1940limited Рік тому

      Mr. Twombly was a financial adviser to one of the Vanderbilts and managed his investments well thus he was rewarded well. I don't think that's a robber baron.

  • @tonil.476
    @tonil.476 3 роки тому +3

    Too big

  • @chrisskinner6291
    @chrisskinner6291 2 роки тому +1

    Wow a pagans home

  • @Doyle18able
    @Doyle18able 3 роки тому +14

    This is a 110 room house. For what reason? Please someone enlighten me.
    That big a family? no.
    See how much you can skim off the top of your business? yes.
    This is old money trash.

    • @cbboyle5117
      @cbboyle5117 3 роки тому +10

      penniated I haven’t started the video yet, but im sure all this was built pre-income tax! The Vanderbilts certainly made their fortune pre-tax. They had to spend their money on something! You wouldn’t be jealous, would you??😁

    • @echocheck
      @echocheck 3 роки тому +10

      If you have 150 people over for the weekend they have to sleep someplace. Also there were 25 house servants who had bedrooms.

    • @StephieGsrEvolution
      @StephieGsrEvolution 3 роки тому +1

      The workers earned most of it.
      Yes, these people were trash when not far away, people were suffering the Great Depression

    • @1940limited
      @1940limited Рік тому

      What a bitter person you are. It was built to show off and upstage all the other rich people on Madison Ave, but who cares? I'll take it.

    • @1940limited
      @1940limited Рік тому

      @@cbboyle5117 Pre-income tax. What a life! Woodrow Wilson put an end to that. He was the robber baron!