I have visited the Breakers mansion. It is impossible to describe how it feels to be inside it. A must visit for people who like opulence and beauty, and also history.
I’ve visited twice. While I found the grounds beautiful. the house itself was gaudy and unusually cold. I imagine that over time it would be depressing to live in such a place, especially if your only involvement in its creation was to inherit it.
We visited in 1968 during my navy training. We did the cliff walk and visited this mansion and others. It was like being in an hotel far from home sweet home surroundings.
I watch these videos in AWE. Only one generation actually worked and built these magnificent homes. The rest of the generations lived off "OLD" money and never replaced it. Im glad the Historical society saved this place even if they didn't do it nicely
As a tour guide at The Breakers (summers) from 2000 - 2003 before audio guides I would see Gladys happily walking her dogs. It was delightful to give the tours to the visitors. I can assure you that there were over a million fascinated visitors each year and cultural events even then. We promoted all the positive aspects of the beautiful house and the family’s history.
I have visited the breakers a couple of times. Extraordinary beauty. I find it shocking that the Preservation Society evicted the Vanderbilt descendants. Their presence and family connection to the estate makes a historical relevance and time continuity to the place. What a great shame.
They didnt, its way more complicated. I Was there the last year the family had the right to use part of it as a summer home. Their right to do so expired. I thought it was kind of sad and wrong. I actually live in a property their family once owed
I bet the Vanderbilts who had to work for there fortune would not have been so liberal to give it away, especially to jealous people who evicted the remaining family members.
@@robertpuleo1203the amount the family gets as a tax write off far exceeds what the house is worth and what they could make in a lifetime. It's actually beneficial and sad at the same time, but money is king and when they consider how much it takes to operate such a place, selling it makes a lot of cents. (Pun intended).
I have visited and it’s beyond amazing! The guided tours are very informative as there are so many stories and aspects of the experience which needs to happen through a guided tour in order to fully grasp the history and appreciate the culture of the Guilded Age
When you realize the Commodore had over ten children then they had children and they had children etc. eventually if your not earning money you’re just spending someone else’s.
Estate taxes carved out most of it. When Florence Vanderbilt Twombly died she left a $22 million dollar estate and the government took $18 million in death taxes.
Countess Gladys held-on the mansion till the end! It was her heirs that sold it to the Preservation Society. George of Biltmore, Cornelius of 5th Ave and William Kissiam of 5th Ave all spend the majority of their fortunes during their lifetimes. George ran-out of money building Biltmore. Fred (the Silent Vandebilt) ran the family business and became the richest of that generation, building Rough Neck in Newport. The Commodore and his son William viewed William's children as fools, who would spend and throw-away the fortune. William built the Triple Palace on 5th Ave, wanting it to stand for eternity, but his children and grandchildren found a way to break his will and disregard his wishes, as they were in want of more and more money to finance their foolish and lavish lifestyles. Only in America, folks.
Frederick built Rough Point in Newport. The disinherited Cornelius III died worth $105 million! Really? Only in America? How many British aristocratic fortunes were lost to gambling, overspending, etc.? Even with an American Dollar Princess as an ancestor, the 13th Duke of Manchester was charged with fraud in the US (passing a bad check) plus burglary in England where he spent 5 years in prison!
Many British families did the same thing. They lost most of their mansions and estates after WWII. When Great Britain went socialist, those families couldn’t afford the taxes. They simply moved out and abandoned those huge estates.
So proud to experience the (Breakers) and more mansions of Newport,just this past October 2023 . It was truly a sight to behold,and a great experience back in time of the gilded era.
It was a great experience for white people. The Gilded Age began 20 years after the end of slavery in America. There was no federal income tax at the time, so your earnings were all yours.
My first visit to Newport and the breakers was back in 1991, more than 30 years ago! I was in my early 20’s and was totally amazed by it. I have visited a few more times in the 90s but have not been since. I adore Newport and hope to return one day soon! Though I’m sad to hear there are no longer regular tour guides.
It’s actually the exception rather than the rule that the descendants of some gilded age family will inhabit a grand stately mansion even if they still own it. Even in England, descendants of aristocratic families will typically live in a smaller, more manageable house on their estate or inhabit just a fraction of their old stately home. The rest of the house will be used for tours and special events or just used for family gatherings at Christmas. To bring these houses up to code and with modern plumbing, electrical and HVAC systems is so prohibitively expensive and not really even desirable by 21st century owners. Smaller stately homes are commonly still used as residences but anything the size of The Breakers is just too big and unwieldy.
They also can't support themselves anymore off the land. In the past, farming and animal husbandry were a big part of aristocratic income prior to the industrial revolution. Once the middle class moved into manufacturing, agrarian production lost it's place as the heart of the economy. Many of the old English estates, manors and castles need tourism to provide the necessary upkeep for the buildings to remain viable.
@@TimothyCHendersonI think a lot of the aristocracy lost their land, too. I wish I could remember exactly, but it was around WWI or WWII. And taxes, death taxes were raised skyrocketed, so the Crown could raise money to pay for the wars.
There is so much that goes into caring for a home like this. They had staff that took care of the grounds to housekeeping and cooking etc. And that doesn't include heating these huge things. Lack of heat does so much damage. They are truly huge beautiful money pits.
@@TimothyCHenderson more efficient ocean transportation played a big part as well. English and European consumers could rely on cheaper food products shipped from Canada, the US, Argentina and Australia. That caused an agricultural recession and a plummeting of land values in England. The dukes and earls no longer had the incomes to pay for their expensive homes. Thank goodness they found other revenue streams otherwise the estates would’ve been parceled out and the homes destroyed. Englands architectural heritage is richer for that.
I first toured the mansion in 1969. Tours went up and down the grand staircase and only 3 bedrooms on the second floor were open to the public then. Plus no one knew that the "silver leaf" in the morning room was really platinum. I want to slide down the main stairs on a silver waiter like Countess Szapary said she did.
I have ZERO respect for the Newport Preservation Society. I think it was an asset to have the decendants living on the top floor. They had every right to live in their grandparents home. This is what happens with an over zealous group of innane snobs
this video is actually misleading. The Newport preservation society didn't evict them. the 3rd floor was lived in by Countess Sylvia Szapary who died in 1998. she had a lifetime tenancy. her kids continued to live on the 3rd floor for the remaining years, then in 2018 the lease was expired that allowed the Vanderbilt descendants to live in the house. Thier was no drama all it was a lease that expired that the Vanderbilts agreed on decades before. The visitor center drama was just an excuse for the Vanderbilts to stay in the house longer past the lease expiration date.
My grandmother knew the house in late teens and in the 1920s , unfortunately many upper American families , some rich and many not so well off , were heavily taxed in 1917 , and the devastating crash of 1929 ,was another blow to there way life, and one should remember many of these very expensive homes were built on one generation vanity, and most of the art work , was after giving to museums . My grandmother father had his own railroad car and one for the servants until 1930 , the staff were mostly African American , so wouldn’t be allowed to use , the other cars . I find it so interesting, this sudden fascination about the so called gilded age.
I don't know that it is "sudden fascination". I think people have always been interested in what the extremely wealthy have done. These houses have always been larger than life examples. Most people can't fathom having that kind of money. And of course all the daily living like the servant examples that you state - it was happening then and basically accepted, no matter where you were in the world. It's good to have this recorded history so that we learn to not repeat it.
I first visited The Breakers on a family vacation when I was around 12 years old and it's magnificence has endured in my heart. In my 40s my husband and I moved to Rhode Island and visited as many of the mansions as we could. The Breakers will always remain Number One in my book! It is a National Treasure...one to be gently tended after forever.
We visited Blenheim in England one year. The tour guide asked if any of us wanted to see the private apartments while the Duke and duchess were in New York on vacation. So for 10$ more my mother and I , being huge Vanderbilt and especially Consuelo fans, got to see where she and now her descendants live . There were newspapers piled up on an ordinary couch in a palatial room with 20 foot ceiling with 3 feet crowned molding. Huge windows that looked out over the gardens that the 9th Duke of Marlborough built with Vanderbilt money. Since this was also the birthplace of Winston Churchill, it was funny to see a pack if Winston cigarettes in a frame on the mantle of the fireplace. A huge , life size, portrait of Consuelo , Duchess of Marlborough hung in the hallway lined with thick red carpet. And in one room was a huge fan pattern quilt in a glass case hung on the wall . It was said to have been made of the Duchess’s many ball gowns over the years. It was all just so fascinating and a pinch me moment for my mother and me. ❤
I have toured or photographed every Vanderbilt mansion still standing. Last on my list to see was Biltmore. It ,to me was the most stunning of all. I had to travel from Australia to do this and it took 12 years to visit all of them!! Biltmore was just beautiful. Such a shame the 5th Ave homes were torn down. That is what started my quest...I did a Vanderbilt walking tour while in NYC years ago and became obsessed. February 2020 also saw me visit the last of my Kennedy homes as well.Palm Beach was the last to do on my list.
Anderson Cooper prefaced this in his book "Vanderbilt: the rise and fall of an American dynasty". Was really sad that they got evicted. Would love to see a video on the biltmore estate.
I have been to the Biltmore and it is amazing the design is unbelievable they built floors between floors and going up the steps it seems impossible to figure out how the architect did that
@@leedavis3704 We went to the biltmore in August and loved every minute of it
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About that Biltmore Estate... poor ole George didn't even get to enjoy it much, as he passed away at such an early age. And yes, if one only lives a very short life, he is indeed, poor, unless, of course, he is wealthy in spirit. We can only hope that he roamed the halls of splendor, as a ghost, in order that he would get his money's worth, not to mention all the stress he endured, as the mountain hicks tried desperately, to meet his standards in such a palatial building effort. R.I.P. George (if by chance, you're reading this), you remember me. I'm the one you teased while you & I had our little visit years ago. ~James🌠
I’ve seen the Newport mansions briefly from the outside, but never toured them. I do have a connection though as the Vanderbilts and I share a common ancestor 10 generations back in New Amsterdam.
I actually visited the Biltmore Mansion around Christmas of 2011 when I was 13. Even did a project on North Carolina where i learned about the mansion. It is beyond beautiful, has a indoor pool, indoor bowling alley and a vineyard and winery
I live in California and we visited the homes in Newport several years ago. The Breakers was fabulous although we had to wait in a long line to enter the property. I also recommend the mansion where Robert Redford and Mia Farrow filmed the Great Gatsby. The mansion is featured extensively in the movie.
I visited The Breakers and Rosecliff (the Gatsby mansion) when I was 14, with my school class. I didn't think any of my classmates would be interested in these fancy houses, but they were. And when we saw the heart-shaped staircase in Rosecliff, many female classmates said for sure they were going to get married in the ballroom. 🥰
Want to see the Breakers… sad the Historical Society didn’t see the value of keeping remaining descendants in residence! Very short sighted, would have given even more incentive for visiting.
I’ve toured the Newport mansions many times. I was blessed enough to get to see the Astor Beechwood mansion, the Belmont mansion and Hammersmith Farm ( Kennedy ) before they all went private. It’s worth seeing the mansions on Long Island as well. Hyde park and Eagles Nest ( I think is the name). It’s so fun to dream about those that lived there and what it must have been like.
The fall of the Vanderbilts would have to be one of the most dramatic in American history. From the unparalleled wealth of the Commodore to the final humiliation of eviction from The Breakers. A tale of wealth squandered by subsequent generations.
@@japanjack62that is good to know because they shouldn’t have been evicted in the first place it is there family members legacy and it is history lived and as long as one heir is alive it is still there family history being lived and made and history is important it repeats itself we learn from it and grow from it ❤😊😊😊
After watching "The Great Gatsby " with Robert Radford, went to visit The Breakers, Rosecliff and Marble House. Thank you this video is very interesting.
I toured the Breakers in the mid 2000s. I di not recall the gorgeous rooms you display. Of course I have little understanding of residing at the Breakers though it seemed on my tour to be a ridiculous uncomfortable place. What is shown as the application to public use is by far in my opinion to be the best age of the facilities.
The family was right not to want a gaudy visitor center. The society evicting the family was horrible. They didn't honor the spirit of the original agreement.
I've been to the Breakers several times starting in 1980. I wanted to see the breathtaking interior by Richard Morris Hunt and was not only impressed but left in awe! I haven't been back for about 20 years and plan to visit again this fall. On my first visit I saw the framed blueprints of Biltmore House, the owner's son's property in NC and vowed to visit one day. I made that journey from Atlantic Canada in 2008, stayed for a week staying at the Inn on Biltmore Estate and enjoying different tours each day.
We must oreserve all homes left from these eras. They are our American history. They are our coloseums, pyramids, and ahould be protected by our state andnfederal govts. Before sending money overseas to other countries, we should make these places come first and be restored and protected for future generations. We won't see homes built like this ever again ! We could never afford them, or their craftsmanship today. Each home should receive state and federal monies that prospective owners should have access to, to save them. To watch them rot all over our country, or be tackily "remodeled", should be criminal. Architectural preservation funds. Now before any more are lost. Look at Lousiana and Mississippi, and even those up north. We will never see buildings like this built today. Its heartbreaking. 💔
I agree with your entire statement I believe we need to preserve and keep these historic places so much new technology in building but they will never have the solid foundation and strength as these homes were built to last like our ancestors designed them to be when America 🇺🇸 protect our heritage and constitution and amendment our country was built by god fearing people who put on our money in god we trust not new technology but god almighty our creator who made us all so I believe that it is very important and valuable for us to protect and preserve our culture and architectural history and heritage and traditions because they were built on a solid foundation in god we trust ❤✝️🤶🎅🕎🧑🎄😇❄️✡️🎄☮️❤️👼🙏🇺🇸👍✝️☃️
I was born in Newport in the Naval Hospital. My moms friend worked at the breakers and went often when she visited her friend. I went when I was in school for a field trip. Later as an adult in the early 2000's, every time it was so nice and enjoyable!!
Another awesome video of history....thank you for sharing 😁 You should do a video on the illustrious Merrill Estate/Chandler Mansion in Andover, Maine.
"As creations are designed to emulate light, appreciate importance, accept grandeur, it is to commemorate life's standards in a registered society, designed to recognize, regain, and restore historical richness of time"
The Breakers is comparable to Versailles in grandeur. Biltmore is wonderful and HUGE but doesn't intend to be regally gilded. It's a large country house.
I visited the Breakers in the early 2000! The mansion and it's history was very interesting! Everything was displayed as left by the family! Spectacular!!
It indeed has a lot of marble. Loved the kitchen and learning veshesua was a favorite soup. Loved learning about the joyous music played at the dock house waiting for supply ships. It has a Statley situation precariously posed by the sea. Loved learning about Gloria and the slanderous villanry that befell her reputation. It was a marvelous escape from the dregs of actual life. I even bought a souvenir. It was a joy to behold and a fond memory of the past
I worked with a young man, nearly 50 years ago, who told me what it like for his family to live in a mere antebellum mansion that they rented before it was completely abandoned. He said that the living room was so large that the boys were able to play basketball in it. They thought it was great fun!
Yes I've been there and there are no words to describe how in awe you are when inside. Saw all of summer cottages of the rich and famous. Don't miss going to see how the other half lived.
I recently took the guided third floor renovation tour - limited to 10 people at a time. I see some of the comments here saying the Vanderbilts were evicted due to a plumbing issue. Our tour guide explained that the house was originally designed to capture rainwater and feed it into a cistern at ground level where it was filtered and pumped into a holding tank similar to a water tower. From there it was gravity fed to faucets for human consumption. The city water was only used for non-consumption purposes due to water tests showing contamination from lead piping. All of this plumbing is interior to the house - there are no external gutters or tanks. Some of this rainwater capture plumbing is leaking. In at least one of the 3rd floor bedrooms you can see clear water stains coming down an interior wall onto the fabric wallpaper - the water is not coming from a roof leak its coming from the plumbing. Side note: for those of you interested in the nuts and bolts of operating the house and to see the wine pantry in the cellar I recommend taking the separate guided tour "Beneath the Breakers" as well as the third floor renovation tour if you can handle climbing 3 flights of stairs. There is also a fourth floor which has additional servants quarters as well as the attic which is still not open to the public.
The Breakers was the first mansion I visited in Newport. I put off visiting the wooden summer cottage Kingscote because it was so much older and wasn't fancy. But it ended up being lovely, and with a spectacular McKim-Mead-White dining room. Do put this home on your list!
I toured it when i visited Rhode Island summer 2019. Just before we went, i read about the visitor center controversy that ended the Vanderbilt occupation. I thought this was sad turn. Anderson cooper gave an interview a few years before about visiting his relatives there. He had fond memories. That visit was my 3rd since the late 90s. They used to have guided tours. I loved those. The audio tour is ok, you just do not get the personal touch i find is more entertaining. Btw, the only positive thing i liked about the visitor center was it has restrooms.
This being a very recent video, I worked at the Mansion when Gladys and her son lived on the 3rd floor. I never saw them once in my time there and there was an uneasy feeling when they left. It did feel as if they were being kicked out. For me, it seemed, it bruised that tenuous relationship for good.
I've been there many a time, from when Personal Tour Guides were around, thru the taped recordings you now walk around with. It was much more exciting with the tour guides, but the grandeur and history is still one of the most remarkable experiences of my love of history. I HATE what became of the Vanderbilt money situation. I'm a mere peasant compared to any of them, but I so admire their origins and place in an age and time. There was no need to evict them. There HAD to be another way.
I find it very disgusting that a historical society, perhaps better they should be called a HOA. Had the ability to evict the Vanderbilts heirs from their own home. Someone needs to temper the power of HOAs and i guess not " historical societies " disgusting
I have been there twice and enjoyed it immensely. I think sometimes administrators in types of organizations like "Historical Societies" get too hopped up with their power. I feel bad for the Szaparys'.
That’s because it wasn’t. Our history is a lie, and that building was “founded”, not built. What does “founded” mean? How did they build something like that as well as countless other masterpieces in the horse and buggy days?
I have been inside the Breakers mansion and several others in the early 2000's and it was a must see 👀 thing to do if you can appreciate fine living at its best 👌.
Toured The Breakers 2 weeks ago. Was told by a lady that waited on us in gift shop that the last of the Vanderbilt family had to leave third floor because of antiquated plumbing. Lol
The Countess lived in an apartment inside that was once a part of the servants quarters. In 1972 the preservation society bought the Breakers for $365,000.
I purchased tickets at the Visitor Center. It appeared to me that is was constructed to not be a "sore thumb" and take away from the rhrill of walking up to the Breakers. It was a thrill of my lifetime.
I visited the Breakers several years prior to 2018. I can't remember the tour guide mentioning the fact that some of the family still lived there. In seeing this video now it makes sense. Why highlight the fact the relatives were on their way out; because by that time, I assume, they really didn't own the property anymore.
When selling a historical mansion such as the breakers, the family usually gets a huge amount as a tax benefit. With that said, the Vanderbilt's only wanted to share the breakers, not completely sell it, but they needed the money to operate the place. A mansion that old and the that large takes hundreds of thousands to run a year. I had visited the breakers and the other summer cottages a few times and I miss the days of seeing the heirs walking around. It was comforting to know all was not lost to them. Unfortunately, the preservation society was looking out for the public, not the heirs. I was totally against the welcoming center, because it adds to the foot traffic and ruins the land. I had been very disappointed when they turned rosecliff into a wedding venue. Build a venue in the likeness of, but don't use the original. It's the same as adding a welcoming center. History is lost when it becomes modernized for today's uses.
It''s on my 'bucket list' to visit, although I have been to the Biltmore. I certainly agree with the Vanderbilt's family position that a modern visitor center would be very unbecoming and take down the overall impression of a visit. Proof - they did a modern enterance to Jefferson's Monticello and turned it into a crass insult to one of our founding fathers personal home. Horrible mistake and shocking to see for someone who had seen it prior in its original picturesque state..
Having been to the Biltmore Estates as a personal pilgrimage many times in my life, I hope, someday, to again add my own pilgrimage to the Breakers and again to the Biltmore whilst staying at the wonderful Biltmore Inn. Perhaps someday, I will introduce another lady to my Biltmore mistress. 😉❤
Unpopular opinion: If you can no longer afford the upkeep of your family estate, you don't just continue to live there just because you gave it over to a historical society.
It sounds, to me, that the historical society is more Vanderbilt than his descendants. He was a ruthless businessman that forced his competitors to bend to his will with underhanded trickery and sabotage.
My grandmother always said: From shirtsleeves to shirtsleeves in 3 generations. The first makes it,the second spends it,and the third generation goes back to work.
The Vanderbilts still own Biltmore Mansion, which makes the Breakers look like a carriage house. They charge $100 a head to tour it, tens of thousands for weddings and events, and probably gross hundred of millions of dollars which all goes back to the family members.
Toured many times and visited the third floor where the Szaparys lived in the summers when I was a child. Played with Gladys and Paul Szapary as children, and there is much more to this story. Paul and Gladys should have moved out when their mother, Countess Sylvia Szapary, died in 1998. That was part of the terms of sale when the house was sold to the Preservations Society, but they were permitted to stay until the third floor needed much work, that's when they had to leave. The visitor's center dispute was just a faux fracas as they tried to stay longer. You, unfortunately are not an old Newporter and not privy to the real inside story.
Have visited the mansion and was very impressed. The family made their own bed with extravagant spending and so Gloria taught her son, Anderson, to value his own career and make his own money. Bravo! 14:50
I am not an old Newporter but know people who are and I also heard that they were only there until the society got around to renovating that floor. Thanks for letting everyone know.
Not quite. The society argued the mansion was unsafe for residential use, ventilation, water and electrical. However employees who use all those same things daily are magically safe. If it was simply to be renovated they could have moved back in. The argument was it would need renovated to be safe, but it was deemed safe for museum use as it sits.@@mgmfan1
COMMENT: Have you ever been to The Breakers Mansion - or have visiting it on your “bucket list”?
I have visited the Breakers mansion. It is impossible to describe how it feels to be inside it. A must visit for people who like opulence and beauty, and also history.
I haven't had the pleasure to visit, but it is on my wish list. 🎄
I’ve visited twice. While I found the grounds beautiful. the house itself was gaudy and unusually cold. I imagine that over time it would be depressing to live in such a place, especially if your only involvement in its creation was to inherit it.
Visited the Breakers in September, it was wonderful and on my bucket list for sure
We visited in 1968 during my navy training. We did the cliff walk and visited this mansion and others. It was like being in an hotel far from home sweet home surroundings.
I watch these videos in AWE. Only one generation actually worked and built these magnificent homes. The rest of the generations lived off "OLD" money and never replaced it. Im glad the Historical society saved this place even if they didn't do it nicely
As a tour guide at The Breakers (summers) from 2000 - 2003 before audio guides I would see Gladys happily walking her dogs. It was delightful to give the tours to the visitors. I can assure you that there were over a million fascinated visitors each year and cultural events even then. We promoted all the positive aspects of the beautiful house and the family’s history.
I bet I saw you as a kid! I actually live in one of the properties they owned in PA
@@johnsnow145 Could have! 😊
I have visited the breakers a couple of times. Extraordinary beauty. I find it shocking that the Preservation Society evicted the Vanderbilt descendants. Their presence and family connection to the estate makes a historical relevance and time continuity to the place. What a great shame.
They didnt, its way more complicated. I Was there the last year the family had the right to use part of it as a summer home. Their right to do so expired. I thought it was kind of sad and wrong. I actually live in a property their family once owed
I bet the Vanderbilts who had to work for there fortune would not have been so liberal to give it away, especially to jealous people who evicted the remaining family members.
@@robertpuleo1203the amount the family gets as a tax write off far exceeds what the house is worth and what they could make in a lifetime. It's actually beneficial and sad at the same time, but money is king and when they consider how much it takes to operate such a place, selling it makes a lot of cents. (Pun intended).
@@Ninjanimegamer They should've turned it into a museum, that would've kept money flowing in. I guess the younger generation wasn't too bright.
I have visited and it’s beyond amazing! The guided tours are very informative as there are so many stories and aspects of the experience which needs to happen through a guided tour in order to fully grasp the history and appreciate the culture of the Guilded Age
When you realize the Commodore had over ten children then they had children and they had children etc. eventually if your not earning money you’re just spending someone else’s.
Estate taxes carved out most of it. When Florence Vanderbilt Twombly died she left a $22 million dollar estate and the government took $18 million in death taxes.
Countess Gladys held-on the mansion till the end! It was her heirs that sold it to the Preservation Society. George of Biltmore, Cornelius of 5th Ave and William Kissiam of 5th Ave all spend the majority of their fortunes during their lifetimes. George ran-out of money building Biltmore. Fred (the Silent Vandebilt) ran the family business and became the richest of that generation, building Rough Neck in Newport. The Commodore and his son William viewed William's children as fools, who would spend and throw-away the fortune. William built the Triple Palace on 5th Ave, wanting it to stand for eternity, but his children and grandchildren found a way to break his will and disregard his wishes, as they were in want of more and more money to finance their foolish and lavish lifestyles. Only in America, folks.
Frederick built Rough Point in Newport. The disinherited Cornelius III died worth $105 million! Really? Only in America? How many British aristocratic fortunes were lost to gambling, overspending, etc.? Even with an American Dollar Princess as an ancestor, the 13th Duke of Manchester was charged with fraud in the US (passing a bad check) plus burglary in England where he spent 5 years in prison!
Many British families did the same thing. They lost most of their mansions and estates after WWII. When Great Britain went socialist, those families couldn’t afford the taxes. They simply moved out and abandoned those huge estates.
Praise invisible sky 💩! Amerikkka!
Not just America.. all over the world as long as humans exist, greed will be everywhere.
This is the real truth
So proud to experience the (Breakers) and more mansions of Newport,just this past October 2023 . It was truly a sight to behold,and a great experience back in time of the gilded era.
It was a great experience for white people. The Gilded Age began 20 years after the end of slavery in America. There was no federal income tax at the time, so your earnings were all yours.
My first visit to Newport and the breakers was back in 1991, more than 30 years ago! I was in my early 20’s and was totally amazed by it. I have visited a few more times in the 90s but have not been since. I adore Newport and hope to return one day soon! Though I’m sad to hear there are no longer regular tour guides.
It’s actually the exception rather than the rule that the descendants of some gilded age family will inhabit a grand stately mansion even if they still own it. Even in England, descendants of aristocratic families will typically live in a smaller, more manageable house on their estate or inhabit just a fraction of their old stately home. The rest of the house will be used for tours and special events or just used for family gatherings at Christmas. To bring these houses up to code and with modern plumbing, electrical and HVAC systems is so prohibitively expensive and not really even desirable by 21st century owners. Smaller stately homes are commonly still used as residences but anything the size of The Breakers is just too big and unwieldy.
They also can't support themselves anymore off the land. In the past, farming and animal husbandry were a big part of aristocratic income prior to the industrial revolution. Once the middle class moved into manufacturing, agrarian production lost it's place as the heart of the economy. Many of the old English estates, manors and castles need tourism to provide the necessary upkeep for the buildings to remain viable.
@@TimothyCHendersonI think a lot of the aristocracy lost their land, too. I wish I could remember exactly, but it was around WWI or WWII. And taxes, death taxes were raised skyrocketed, so the Crown could raise money to pay for the wars.
There is so much that goes into caring for a home like this. They had staff that took care of the grounds to housekeeping and cooking etc. And that doesn't include heating these huge things. Lack of heat does so much damage. They are truly huge beautiful money pits.
These buildings were always testament to the insanity and greed/selfish grandiosity of its inhabitants....
@@TimothyCHenderson more efficient ocean transportation played a big part as well. English and European consumers could rely on cheaper food products shipped from Canada, the US, Argentina and Australia. That caused an agricultural recession and a plummeting of land values in England. The dukes and earls no longer had the incomes to pay for their expensive homes. Thank goodness they found other revenue streams otherwise the estates would’ve been parceled out and the homes destroyed. Englands architectural heritage is richer for that.
I first toured the mansion in 1969. Tours went up and down the grand staircase and only 3 bedrooms on the second floor were open to the public then. Plus no one knew that the "silver leaf" in the morning room was really platinum. I want to slide down the main stairs on a silver waiter like Countess Szapary said she did.
I have ZERO respect for the Newport Preservation Society. I think it was an asset to have the decendants living on the top floor. They had every right to live in their grandparents home. This is what happens with an over zealous group of innane snobs
this video is actually misleading. The Newport preservation society didn't evict them. the 3rd floor was lived in by Countess Sylvia Szapary who died in 1998. she had a lifetime tenancy. her kids continued to live on the 3rd floor for the remaining years, then in 2018 the lease was expired that allowed the Vanderbilt descendants to live in the house. Thier was no drama all it was a lease that expired that the Vanderbilts agreed on decades before. The visitor center drama was just an excuse for the Vanderbilts to stay in the house longer past the lease expiration date.
@@ConnollyCorbinthey should! it belongs to them and they sold it for a pittance to the preservation trust
I have visited the mansion several times. It’s a must!
My grandmother knew the house in late teens and in the 1920s , unfortunately many upper American families , some rich and many not so well off , were heavily taxed in 1917 , and the devastating crash of 1929 ,was another blow to there way life, and one should remember many of these very expensive homes were built on one generation vanity, and most of the art work , was after giving to museums . My grandmother father had his own railroad car and one for the servants until 1930 , the staff were mostly African American , so wouldn’t be allowed to use , the other cars . I find it so interesting, this sudden fascination about the so called gilded age.
I don't know that it is "sudden fascination". I think people have always been interested in what the extremely wealthy have done. These houses have always been larger than life examples. Most people can't fathom having that kind of money. And of course all the daily living like the servant examples that you state - it was happening then and basically accepted, no matter where you were in the world. It's good to have this recorded history so that we learn to not repeat it.
I wouldn't use the word "unfortunately", it was incredibly necessary!
I first visited The Breakers on a family vacation when I was around 12 years old and it's magnificence has endured in my heart. In my 40s my husband and I moved to Rhode Island and visited as many of the mansions as we could. The Breakers will always remain Number One in my book! It is a National Treasure...one to be gently tended after forever.
We visited Blenheim in England one year. The tour guide asked if any of us wanted to see the private apartments while the Duke and duchess were in New York on vacation. So for 10$ more my mother and I , being huge Vanderbilt and especially Consuelo fans, got to see where she and now her descendants live . There were newspapers piled up on an ordinary couch in a palatial room with 20 foot ceiling with 3 feet crowned molding. Huge windows that looked out over the gardens that the 9th Duke of Marlborough built with Vanderbilt money. Since this was also the birthplace of Winston Churchill, it was funny to see a pack if Winston cigarettes in a frame on the mantle of the fireplace. A huge , life size, portrait of Consuelo , Duchess of Marlborough hung in the hallway lined with thick red carpet. And in one room was a huge fan pattern quilt in a glass case hung on the wall . It was said to have been made of the Duchess’s many ball gowns over the years. It was all just so fascinating and a pinch me moment for my mother and me. ❤
Sounds like your tour guide figured a way to side hussle while doing her 9-5 gig.😂😂😂
Good for her.
I have toured or photographed every Vanderbilt mansion still standing. Last on my list to see was Biltmore. It ,to me was the most stunning of all. I had to travel from Australia to do this and it took 12 years to visit all of them!! Biltmore was just beautiful. Such a shame the 5th Ave homes were torn down. That is what started my quest...I did a Vanderbilt walking tour while in NYC years ago and became obsessed. February 2020 also saw me visit the last of my Kennedy homes as well.Palm Beach was the last to do on my list.
I'm so glad you got to see ALL of the remaining Vanderbilt homes. Imagine traveling from Australia to see them over 12 years!
Anderson Cooper prefaced this in his book "Vanderbilt: the rise and fall of an American dynasty". Was really sad that they got evicted.
Would love to see a video on the biltmore estate.
I have been to the Biltmore and it is amazing the design is unbelievable they built floors between floors and going up the steps it seems impossible to figure out how the architect did that
@@leedavis3704 We went to the biltmore in August and loved every minute of it
About that Biltmore Estate... poor ole George didn't even get to enjoy it much, as he passed away at such an early age. And yes, if one only lives a very short life, he is indeed, poor, unless, of course, he is wealthy in spirit. We can only hope that he roamed the halls of splendor, as a ghost, in order that he would get his money's worth, not to mention all the stress he endured, as the mountain hicks tried desperately, to meet his standards in such a palatial building effort. R.I.P. George (if by chance, you're reading this), you remember me. I'm the one you teased while you & I had our little visit years ago. ~James🌠
I’ve seen the Newport mansions briefly from the outside, but never toured them. I do have a connection though as the Vanderbilts and I share a common ancestor 10 generations back in New Amsterdam.
Why would anyone see the outside and not venture in???
@@Katherine1DRMAKR We were young poor students.
The Breakers is absolutely stunning. The Newport Preservation Society has done a great job.
I was stationed at Newport for OCS and toured most of the Newport mansions in 1979. Your photographs show it to be as beautiful as I remember it.
I actually visited the Biltmore Mansion around Christmas of 2011 when I was 13. Even did a project on North Carolina where i learned about the mansion. It is beyond beautiful, has a indoor pool, indoor bowling alley and a vineyard and winery
I live in California and we visited the homes in Newport several years ago. The Breakers was fabulous although we had to wait in a long line to enter the property. I also recommend the mansion where Robert Redford and Mia Farrow filmed the Great Gatsby. The mansion is featured extensively in the movie.
I visited The Breakers and Rosecliff (the Gatsby mansion) when I was 14, with my school class. I didn't think any of my classmates would be interested in these fancy houses, but they were. And when we saw the heart-shaped staircase in Rosecliff, many female classmates said for sure they were going to get married in the ballroom. 🥰
Want to see the Breakers… sad the Historical Society didn’t see the value of keeping remaining descendants in residence! Very short sighted, would have given even more incentive for visiting.
Like the Royals in England.
Human zoos went out of fashion
I’ve toured the Newport mansions many times. I was blessed enough to get to see the Astor Beechwood mansion, the Belmont mansion and Hammersmith Farm ( Kennedy ) before they all went private. It’s worth seeing the mansions on Long Island as well. Hyde park and Eagles Nest ( I think is the name). It’s so fun to dream about those that lived there and what it must have been like.
I visited The Breakers in 2006 and was completely unaware that family relatives continued to live on the 3rd floor of the mansion.
The fall of the Vanderbilts would have to be one of the most dramatic in American history. From the unparalleled wealth of the Commodore to the final humiliation of eviction from The Breakers. A tale of wealth squandered by subsequent generations.
They aren't as wealthy, but aren't hurting...
@@japanjack62that is good to know because they shouldn’t have been evicted in the first place it is there family members legacy and it is history lived and as long as one heir is alive it is still there family history being lived and made and history is important it repeats itself we learn from it and grow from it ❤😊😊😊
After watching "The Great Gatsby " with Robert Radford, went to visit The Breakers, Rosecliff and Marble House. Thank you this video is very interesting.
I toured the Breakers in the mid 2000s. I di not recall the gorgeous rooms you display. Of course I have little understanding of residing at the Breakers though it seemed on my tour to be a ridiculous uncomfortable place. What is shown as the application to public use is by far in my opinion to be the best age of the facilities.
The family was right not to want a gaudy visitor center. The society evicting the family was horrible. They didn't honor the spirit of the original agreement.
I have been to it many times! EXTRAORDINARY!!!!
I've been to the Breakers several times starting in 1980. I wanted to see the breathtaking interior by Richard Morris Hunt and was not only impressed but left in awe! I haven't been back for about 20 years and plan to visit again this fall. On my first visit I saw the framed blueprints of Biltmore House, the owner's son's property in NC and vowed to visit one day. I made that journey from Atlantic Canada in 2008, stayed for a week staying at the Inn on Biltmore Estate and enjoying different tours each day.
Glad you made the trip to see Biltmore!
I was there the summer of 1984 when I visited New Port RI & went through it & other Mansions in the area! Just Beautiful!!!❤
We went last week and it is still mind boggling the size of the “summer” home. Worth the trip! Christmas is absolutely stunning.
My wife and i have toured many of themansions inNewport but the breakers stands out as the most magnificent inNewport!
We must oreserve all homes left from these eras. They are our American history. They are our coloseums, pyramids, and ahould be protected by our state andnfederal govts. Before sending money overseas to other countries, we should make these places come first and be restored and protected for future generations. We won't see homes built like this ever again ! We could never afford them, or their craftsmanship today. Each home should receive state and federal monies that prospective owners should have access to, to save them. To watch them rot all over our country, or be tackily "remodeled", should be criminal. Architectural preservation funds. Now before any more are lost. Look at Lousiana and Mississippi, and even those up north. We will never see buildings like this built today. Its heartbreaking. 💔
I agree with your entire statement I believe we need to preserve and keep these historic places so much new technology in building but they will never have the solid foundation and strength as these homes were built to last like our ancestors designed them to be when America 🇺🇸 protect our heritage and constitution and amendment our country was built by god fearing people who put on our money in god we trust not new technology but god almighty our creator who made us all so I believe that it is very important and valuable for us to protect and preserve our culture and architectural history and heritage and traditions because they were built on a solid foundation in god we trust ❤✝️🤶🎅🕎🧑🎄😇❄️✡️🎄☮️❤️👼🙏🇺🇸👍✝️☃️
I haven't had the opportunity to visit, but it is on my wish list along with a visit to Biltmore. 🎄❤️🎄
Nice vid, but it would have been better if you showed the before and after, of the disputed visitor center renovations…
I was born in Newport in the Naval Hospital. My moms friend worked at the breakers and went often when she visited her friend. I went when I was in school for a field trip. Later as an adult in the early 2000's, every time it was so nice and enjoyable!!
I would love to see it and am so glad it was saved.
Another awesome video of history....thank you for sharing 😁
You should do a video on the illustrious Merrill Estate/Chandler Mansion in Andover, Maine.
"As creations are designed to emulate light, appreciate importance, accept grandeur, it is to commemorate life's standards in a registered society, designed to recognize, regain, and restore historical richness of time"
Never saw the Breakers, but can’t imagine it could compete with The Biltmore in Asheville , NC !
The Breakers is comparable to Versailles in grandeur. Biltmore is wonderful and HUGE but doesn't intend to be regally gilded. It's a large country house.
We have to face it that some people just have pure luck in the financial department but that doesn't mean they are all long on brains.
I visited the Breakers in the early 2000! The mansion and it's history was very interesting! Everything was displayed as left by the family! Spectacular!!
It indeed has a lot of marble. Loved the kitchen and learning veshesua was a favorite soup. Loved learning about the joyous music played at the dock house waiting for supply ships. It has a
Statley situation precariously posed by the sea. Loved learning about Gloria and the slanderous villanry that befell her reputation. It was a marvelous escape from the dregs of actual life.
I even bought a souvenir. It was a joy to behold and a fond memory of the past
I visited earlier this year, and it was magnificent! A must-see!
Greatest narrator on UA-cam !
I was born in Newport. Mother took me to The Breakers. I don't remember it. I was an infant. But it's on my bucket list when I return to Newport.
I worked with a young man, nearly 50 years ago, who told me what it like for his family to live in a mere antebellum mansion that they rented before it was completely abandoned. He said that the living room was so large that the boys were able to play basketball in it. They thought it was great fun!
Hard to believe they lasted until 2018.
I'm so lucky to see this beautiful mansion The Breaker nice to see it again in the vedio 👍
Yes I've been there and there are no words to describe how in awe you are when inside. Saw all of summer cottages of the rich and famous. Don't miss going to see how the other half lived.
I recently took the guided third floor renovation tour - limited to 10 people at a time. I see some of the comments here saying the Vanderbilts were evicted due to a plumbing issue. Our tour guide explained that the house was originally designed to capture rainwater and feed it into a cistern at ground level where it was filtered and pumped into a holding tank similar to a water tower. From there it was gravity fed to faucets for human consumption. The city water was only used for non-consumption purposes due to water tests showing contamination from lead piping. All of this plumbing is interior to the house - there are no external gutters or tanks. Some of this rainwater capture plumbing is leaking. In at least one of the 3rd floor bedrooms you can see clear water stains coming down an interior wall onto the fabric wallpaper - the water is not coming from a roof leak its coming from the plumbing. Side note: for those of you interested in the nuts and bolts of operating the house and to see the wine pantry in the cellar I recommend taking the separate guided tour "Beneath the Breakers" as well as the third floor renovation tour if you can handle climbing 3 flights of stairs. There is also a fourth floor which has additional servants quarters as well as the attic which is still not open to the public.
Now I understand the foundations of the French Revolution.
ASTONISHINGLY BEAUTIFUL ! Deceitful what those preservationist have done …. But at least it’s been saved from the recking ball !
Breathtaking!
The Breakers was the first mansion I visited in Newport. I put off visiting the wooden summer cottage Kingscote because it was so much older and wasn't fancy. But it ended up being lovely, and with a spectacular McKim-Mead-White dining room. Do put this home on your list!
I toured it when i visited Rhode Island summer 2019. Just before we went, i read about the visitor center controversy that ended the Vanderbilt occupation. I thought this was sad turn. Anderson cooper gave an interview a few years before about visiting his relatives there. He had fond memories. That visit was my 3rd since the late 90s. They used to have guided tours. I loved those. The audio tour is ok, you just do not get the personal touch i find is more entertaining. Btw, the only positive thing i liked about the visitor center was it has restrooms.
What an amazing regal palace.
I have never been to the Breakers, but have always wanted to..
The Breakers Mansion is my favorite ❤️
This being a very recent video, I worked at the Mansion when Gladys and her son lived on the 3rd floor. I never saw them once in my time there and there was an uneasy feeling when they left. It did feel as if they were being kicked out. For me, it seemed, it bruised that tenuous relationship for good.
I've been there many a time, from when Personal Tour Guides were around, thru the taped recordings you now walk around with. It was much more exciting with the tour guides, but the grandeur and history is still one of the most remarkable experiences of my love of history.
I HATE what became of the Vanderbilt money situation. I'm a mere peasant compared to any of them, but I so admire their origins and place in an age and time.
There was no need to evict them. There HAD to be another way.
I find it very disgusting that a historical society, perhaps better they should be called a HOA. Had the ability to evict the Vanderbilts heirs from their own home. Someone needs to temper the power of HOAs and i guess not
" historical societies " disgusting
Many, many years ago, I visited the Breakers in Newport, RI. Just seemed like a big, old place.
I have been there twice and enjoyed it immensely. I think sometimes administrators in types of organizations like "Historical Societies" get too hopped up with their power. I feel bad for the Szaparys'.
I still can’t believe this was built in 2 years.
That’s because it wasn’t. Our history is a lie, and that building was “founded”, not built. What does “founded” mean? How did they build something like that as well as countless other masterpieces in the horse and buggy days?
@@bethmartof1262 because we live in a simulation run by Jupiter and he decides our faith.
@@Kodakcompactdisc good luck with that.
@@bethmartof1262 I’ll be lucky if Jupiter favours me, which he usually does so I can’t complain.
I have visited Biltmore and I think members of the family still live in part of the mansion.
I have been inside the Breakers mansion and several others in the early 2000's and it was a must see 👀 thing to do if you can appreciate fine living at its best 👌.
Toured The Breakers 2 weeks ago. Was told by a lady that waited on us in gift shop that the last of the Vanderbilt family had to leave third floor because of antiquated plumbing. Lol
Was there a couple months ago! Very interesting!
I love this home ❤❤❤ been there plenty of time ❤❤❤
The Countess lived in an apartment inside that was once a part of the servants quarters. In 1972 the preservation society bought the Breakers for $365,000.
love history videos
I purchased tickets at the Visitor Center. It appeared to me that is was constructed to not be a "sore thumb" and take away from the rhrill of walking up to the Breakers. It was a thrill of my lifetime.
Those families knew NOTHING close to what was needed to design such classy peace of American history
Passed by while hitching from Illinois.
I visited the Breakers several years prior to 2018. I can't remember the tour guide mentioning the fact that some of the family still lived there. In seeing this video now it makes sense. Why highlight the fact the relatives were on their way out; because by that time, I assume, they really didn't own the property anymore.
Beautiful Building
That’s lovely 🥰 home but sad ending 😊
When selling a historical mansion such as the breakers, the family usually gets a huge amount as a tax benefit. With that said, the Vanderbilt's only wanted to share the breakers, not completely sell it, but they needed the money to operate the place. A mansion that old and the that large takes hundreds of thousands to run a year. I had visited the breakers and the other summer cottages a few times and I miss the days of seeing the heirs walking around. It was comforting to know all was not lost to them. Unfortunately, the preservation society was looking out for the public, not the heirs. I was totally against the welcoming center, because it adds to the foot traffic and ruins the land.
I had been very disappointed when they turned rosecliff into a wedding venue. Build a venue in the likeness of, but don't use the original. It's the same as adding a welcoming center. History is lost when it becomes modernized for today's uses.
Yes I have very beautiful, fell in love with it. I was intrigued. ❤
It''s on my 'bucket list' to visit, although I have been to the Biltmore. I certainly agree with the Vanderbilt's family position that a modern visitor center would be very unbecoming and take down the overall impression of a visit. Proof - they did a modern enterance to Jefferson's Monticello and turned it into a crass insult to one of our founding fathers personal home. Horrible mistake and shocking to see for someone who had seen it prior in its original picturesque state..
Having been to the Biltmore Estates as a personal pilgrimage many times in my life, I hope, someday, to again add my own pilgrimage to the Breakers and again to the Biltmore whilst staying at the wonderful Biltmore Inn. Perhaps someday, I will introduce another lady to my Biltmore mistress. 😉❤
bucket list: yest please :-)
PS, guys: a fool and his money are soon parted, as the Commodore predicted of his descendants.
Been there many times over the years my favorite is the holidays. Very sad ending
13:28 i wonder the value if this fireplace alone.
Unpopular opinion: If you can no longer afford the upkeep of your family estate, you don't just continue to live there just because you gave it over to a historical society.
Sad, very sad for the descendants.
It sounds, to me, that the historical society is more Vanderbilt than his descendants. He was a ruthless businessman that forced his competitors to bend to his will with underhanded trickery and sabotage.
Bucket list. 😁
My grandmother always said: From shirtsleeves to shirtsleeves in 3 generations. The first makes it,the second spends it,and the third generation goes back to work.
I was there in the early 1970s.
The Vanderbilts still own Biltmore Mansion, which makes the Breakers look like a carriage house. They charge $100 a head to tour it, tens of thousands for weddings and events, and probably gross hundred of millions of dollars which all goes back to the family members.
Oh boo hoo, how heartbreaking to see the Rich fall.
Yes. 26 years ago. Went on a guided tour. The tour was so rushed that you could hardly have time to look at everything
I visited the Breaker Mansion two times in the 2008 and 2012.
Toured many times and visited the third floor where the Szaparys lived in the summers when I was a child. Played with Gladys and Paul Szapary as children, and there is much more to this story. Paul and Gladys should have moved out when their mother, Countess Sylvia Szapary, died in 1998. That was part of the terms of sale when the house was sold to the Preservations Society, but they were permitted to stay until the third floor needed much work, that's when they had to leave. The visitor's center dispute was just a faux fracas as they tried to stay longer. You, unfortunately are not an old Newporter and not privy to the real inside story.
Have visited the mansion and was very impressed. The family made their own bed with extravagant spending and so Gloria taught her son, Anderson, to value his own career and make his own money. Bravo! 14:50
I am not an old Newporter but know people who are and I also heard that they were only there until the society got around to renovating that floor. Thanks for letting everyone know.
Thanks for clarifying an misleading video.
Not quite. The society argued the mansion was unsafe for residential use, ventilation, water and electrical. However employees who use all those same things daily are magically safe. If it was simply to be renovated they could have moved back in. The argument was it would need renovated to be safe, but it was deemed safe for museum use as it sits.@@mgmfan1