Watch Hill, Rhode Island came to prominence in the late 19th and early 20th century as an exclusive summer resort withwealthy families building sprawling Victorian-style "cottages" along the peninsula. Watch Hill is characterized by the New YorkTimes as a community with a strong sense of privacy and of discreetly used wealth, in contrast with the overpowering castles of the very rich in nearby Newport.
"Stone House", later "Norman Hall", know locally as Lihme Castle. Mott B. Schidmt of New York, architect.
Originally built(1915-16) for William W. Lawrence, who died a month after its completion, whereupon the property was sold to C. Bai Lilme of Chicago.
"NORMAN HALL" RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
FIRST FLOOR PLANS RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
SECOND FLOOR PLANS RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
VIEW FROM THE NORTH RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
NORTH ELEVATION RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
ENTRANCE FRONT RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
DETAIL OF ENTRANCE FRONT RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
SOUTH ELEVATION RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
OCEAN FRONT VIEW RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
WEST ELEVATION RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
EAST ELEVATION RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
EAST END VIEW RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
GENERAL VIEW OF OCEAN FRONT RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
GENERAL VIEW OF OCEAN FRONT RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
DETAIL OF OCEAN TERRACE RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
400 FEET OF OCEAN FRONTAGE RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
IRON GATE AT ENTRANCE VESTIBULE RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
STAIRCASE IN HALL RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
VIEW INTO LIVING HALL RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
LIVING HALL RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
LIVING ROOM RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
DINING ROOM RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
DINING ROOM RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
IMAGERY DATE: 1/23/2005 RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
IMAGERY DATE: 2008 RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
IMAGERY DATE: 2008 RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
IMAGERY DATE: 2008 RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
IMAGERY DATE: 2008 RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
IMAGERY DATE: 9/15/2011 RESIDENCE OF C. BAI LIHME, ESQ., WATCH HILL. R. I. MOTT B. SCHMIDT, ARCHITECT |
Christian Bai Lihme(1866-1946) |
Christian Bai Lihme, a native of Denmark and a chemist, had become a naturalized U.S. citizen and, after marrying Olga Hegeler of Chicago, succeeded her father as president of the Matthissen & Hegeler Zinc Company of LaSalle, Illinois. Born in 1866 in Aalborg, Denmark. After graduating, in 1888, from the University of Copenhagen, where he specialized in chemistry, he came to the United States and became the chief chemist of the Pennsylvania Lead Company of Pittsburgh, a position he held until 1893. He was a director of several banks and mining corporations, and was a member of the Metropolitan, River and Union League Clubs of New York.
In 1901, Mr. Lihme married the former Olga Hegeler, daughter of Edward C. Hegeler, a pioneer zinc smelter. The couple had four children: two daughters(Anita and Olga)and two sons(Harold d. 1964 and Edward). Celebrity came to Anita when she became a princess after marrying Prince Edward Joseph Lobkowicz of Vienna in 1925. Lobkowicz' father was Prince August Lobkowicz, the Privy Counselor and Lord Chamberlain to Emperor Franz Josef, and his mother, the former Countess Palermy of Bohemia, was a lady-in-waiting to the Austrian Court. The Lobkowicz family had an important library and art collection. Olga married into the Griscom family of Philadelphia.
The Lihmes lived in Chicago before moving to New York where they had an apartment at 280 Park Avenue, at the corner of 48th Street. Around 1927, the family moved into an opulent triplex apartment at 950 Fifth Avenue, on the northeast corner of 76th Street, that overlooked the green dome of Temple Beth-El directly across the street and Central Park. Designed by James E. R. Carpenter, who was arguably the foremost architect of luxury residential buildings in New York City at the time, the narrow Italian-Renaissance palazzo-style building was erected in 1926 and completed in January 1927. The finely detailed fourteen-story building originally had two full-floor simplexes, five two-floor duplexes, and servants' rooms at the penthouse. Today, the seven units are owned by some of the city's most notorious billionaire bachelors. Besides "Norman Hall" the Lihme familiy also maintained a winter home in Palm Beach, Fla.
950 Fifth Avenue at 72nd Street New York, NY 10021 |
Following his retirement in 1921, Mr. Lihme began to buy fine paintings by such artists as Rubens, Corot, Rembrandt and others. An important acquisition was "Portrait of the Marchesa Lomellini," one of the seven famous van Dyck paintings that had hung for centuries in the Cattaneo Palace in Genoa, for which Lihme was reported to have paid $200,000. The four others are in the Frick and Widener collections and the two remaining are in the National Gallery in London. He also collected Flemish tapestries, costly porcelains and glassware. The Lomellini family was one of the twenty-eight noble families which ruled Genoa for centuries.
Welte organ console; on far wall: van Dyck's "Portrait of the Marchesa Lomellini" |
On the evening of June 26, 1927, the Lihme residence at 950 Fifth Avenue was vandalized by a doorman, a nightman and an elevator man who were resentful for not receiving a promised bonus from the building, of which Mr. Lihme was part owner. After drinking whiskey for two hours, the three Irishmen let themselves in to the Lihmes' apartment, which was vacant for the summer, where they found and consumed cakes and a baked ham, and bottles marked "Frontenac Export Ale"("Contains all the alcohol needed for long sea travel" the label read). The ham was eaten without the aid of cutlery, and when they had finished eating it one of them flung the bone through the glass panel of the pantry door. Over the next few hours the inebriated trio damaged objects worth $300,000 in the salon and dining room, including chandeliers, mirrors, lamps, vases, paintings, and the Welte-Mignon pipe organ. Several days later, an interior decorator from P. W. French & Co., who had been commissioned to remove some 16th century Flemish tapestries which Mr. Lihme was lending for an exhibition, discovered the damage and had the elevator man alert the police. After questioning, the stalwart doorman confessed to the crime and was ultimately sentenced to a prison term of one and one-half to three years. Although the irreparable damage was estimated to be between $30,00 and $50,000, "Mr. Lhime had insurance against theft, fire, weather, et al.,—but not against drunken lackeys." SOURCE
Anthony van Dyck - Portrait of Marquise Lomellini, with her children at prayer |
C. Bai Lihme died on October 15, 1946, at his home at 950 Fifth Avenue after a long illness. He was 80 years old. Mrs. Olga Lihme died on November 9, 1956, of a heart attack at her home in Palm Beach, Fla., at the age of 79. Anita Lihme Lobkowicz Watts Griscom died in 1976. Anita's son, Prince Edouard de Lobkowicz died in 2010. In 1984 grandson, Prince Edouard-Xavier Lobkowicz, was shot in the throat, weighed down with a giant iron bar and thrown into the River Seine southeast of Paris(assumed drug related). Olga Griscom died at age 53 in 1955.
Charles and Jane Engelhard and their four daughters. |
Charles W. Englehard 1965 |
Because he dealt in precious metals, he was known as "the platinum king" and was thought to have inspired the title character in the James Bond novel Goldfinger by his friend Ian Fleming.
Auric Goldfinger/GOLDFINGER/1964 |
Engelhard was also a noted art collector and a sportsman who raised thoroughbreds at his stables in Aiken, South Carolina, and in England, at Newmarket; one of them, Nijinsky II, won the English Triple Crown. Shortly following Engelhard death in 1971, in an article in the New York Times reporting on his successor at the Engelhard corporation, he was described as having "lived like an Indian rajah, moving majestically with his retinue among his houses and apartments in various parts of the world. He was best known to some people for his racing stable, but better known to others for his multimillion-dollar art collection." Mrs. Engelhard (Jane Brian Mannheimer Engelhard) played a major role in the arts. First enlisted by Jacqueline Kennedy, she was active in efforts to restore the White House over some four decades. She was also a trustee of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, whose Charles Engelhard Court was a gift of the Charles Engelhard Foundation, and of the Pierpont Morgan Library. The Engelhards eldest daughter, Annette, became Mrs. Oscar de la Renta and friend of Brooke Astor.
"Cragwood" was originally built for of Mr. and Mrs. Grafton Pyne. |
March 3, 1971 |
BY PLACING HIS trust in gold, along with platinum and diamonds, Charles William Engelhard in twenty years ran an inheritance of $20 million into an industrial fortune of more than $250 million and became a power in the international financial and business community.
"CRAGWOOD" FAR HILLS, NEW JERSEY |
"The house, which was called "Cragwood", was beautiful to start with. There was an enormous living room with long windows overlooking a lake and Far Hills, miles away. Box gardens sloped down to a swimming pool, and there wasn't another house in sight. The size, smell, and beauty of it alt was really beyond imagining." Sister: The Life of Legendary Interior Decorator Mrs. Henry Parish II
http://tdclassicist.blogspot.com/search?q=Cragwood
http://tdclassicist.blogspot.com/search?q=Cragwood
Mr. Lawrence is a Pennsylvanian by birth and a NewYorker by adoption, a graduate of Princeton University, and his entire life has been spent in the paint and white lead industry. He founded W. W. Lawrence & Co. of Pittsburgh about twenty-five years ago, and until his removal to New York some six or seven years ago, formerly gave this business, in connection with the Sterling White Lead Company, his entire attention, He was one of the founders of the Pittsburgh Paint, Oil and Varnish Club, also its president for a number of years, and in 1892 was president of the National Paint, Oil and Varnish Association. He has always taken an active interest in these affairs and he is keenly interested in everything pertaining to the business.
He was one of the founders of the Sterling White Lead Company and its vice president until it was disposed of to the National Lead Company, when he became treasurer of the latter. A few years later he was made vice president of the National Lead Company, so he is what might be termed a thorough white lead manufacturer, being acquainted with all the various details connected with the industry.
He is quite a traveler and has been making annual trips to Europe. He is very much interested in art and is what might be termed an art connoisseur. He is a member of the University, Manhattan, City Lunch and various other city and country clubs too numerous to mention. He is a broad and liberal minded gentleman and it can be truthfully stated the right man in the right place. Paint, Oil and Drug Review 1910