Wakehurst was the home of international sportsman,
political figure and anglophile James J. Van Alen.
The mansion, conceptualized in 1882, was built between
1884
and 1887. It was designed to replicate Wakehurst Place,
an Elizabethan manor house built in Sussex, England
in 1570, that still stands today.
Charles Eamer Kempe,
an English architect and stained
glass artist drew the original plans to design the
mansion. Newport architect Dudley Newton supervised
the construction
on Ochre Point Avenue, including the assembly of
certain rooms that were created and built in England.
The building
of these rooms, the English Jacobean Long Hall, Dutch
Renaissance den, and Bruges dining room, introduced
the concept of the "museum room." The dining
room was also the first actual neoclassical room by
Robert
Adam to be imported to America.
Typical of Prodigy Houses
designed for the countryside, Wakehurst is characteristic
of rural England during
the late 16th century. The mansion's roof alone provides
a prime example of the distinguished place it holds
in
America's architectural history. The rooflines and
pitch, copper and lead detailing, and exceptionally
large slate
tiles are all representative of the 16th century
technology utilized in the construction of Wakehurst
Place. Even
though Wakehurst is a Gilded Age home, it replicates
a much earlier source that in its own day was unique.
In doing so, Wakehurst's significance as an example
of exceptional achievement in architecture and craftsmanship
is heightened.
It was intended that Wakehurst be a
dramatic landmark
with clusters of diamond-paned bay windows acting
as beacons in the night. Because of Van Alen's romantic
traditionalism, it was lit entirely by gaslight and
candle for many years. The university purchased Wakehurst
in
1972.
The grounds of Wakehurst, created by landscape designer
Ernest Bowditch, recall the green serenity of an
English country estate where a serpentine drive and
footpaths
wind under magnificent specimen trees and end at
formal gardens. Massive trunks, three-lobed pointed
leaves and
cherry-sized seed clusters, distinguish London Plane
Trees (Plantus acerifolia) on the southeast lawn.
On the southwest lawn, huge Weeping Beeches (Fagus
sylvatica
pendula) gracefully droop. Stately Atlas Cedars also
adorn the landscape. Although English Renaissance
in design, the gardens were created by Portuguese master
gardener Frank P. Mendes. His son-in-law, Frank Rosa,
Salve's former chief gardener, used his father-in-law's
photographs to reconstruct the original plans. A
beautiful
stone wall surrounding the grounds unites the manor
house with the other buildings. |