Spring Hill
Red Ground Road, Old Westbury
Designed in the style of an Italian Renaissance villa in 1900 to 1902, this estate was one of the earliest commissions for architect John Russell Pope at the age of only 26 years. The country house was part of a 163-acre estate built for William L. Stow, founder of a Wall Street brokerage firm.
The estate was later purchased by George Crocker and in 1906 by Henry Carnegie Phipps, son of Carnegie Steel's Henry Phipps who named the estate Spring Hill. Mrs. Phipps occupied the house until her death in 1972 and it was demolished soon after. Their son, Ogden Phipps inherited the property and later his daughter Cynthia Phipps.
It was sold to John Kean Designers and Builders for development into a 22-lot gated community in 2004. Kean has posted this history on Spring Hill.
THE STOW FAMILY: THE ESTATES ORIGINAL OWNERS
The original mansion built by W.L. Stow was designed and built to evoke the splendor of an Italian palace, and it truly was the epitome of splendor and taste. The house stood on high ground, overlooking the Long Island Sound to the north and the Atlantic Ocean to the south. Greeted by a pair of marble lions, the steps lead up to this beautifully designed and furnished estate. It was a historic place that encompassed the beauty of Long Island.
THE PHIPPS FAMILY
The estate was then acquired by Henry Carnegie Phipps and his wife Gladys Livingston Mill. Their son Ogden Phipps, who inherited this wonderful estate from his parents, was born November 26,1908 in New York City. Besides his strong business acumen, which drove him to graduate Harvard University and to become a successful stockbroker, Mr. Phipps developed a passion for breeding and racing thoroughbreds. Mr. Phipps came by this naturally enough, as his mother and uncle were founding partners of the Wheatley Stable in 1926.
Mr. Phipps channeled his passion and became a very successful, thoroughbred horse racing executive as well as the owner and breeder of nine championship horses. He was also a founding member of the New York Racing Association and won Eclipse Awards for both leading owner and leading breeder in 1988. His wife, Lillian Bostwick Phipps, shared his enthusiasm when it came to horses, and she is renowned for American steeplechase racing.
BUCKPASSER
One of Mr. Phipp’s most famous horses, who also resided at Spring Hill, was Buckpasser, a champion thoroughbred of pure gold pedigree. Buckpasser was the first horse in history to earn more than a million dollars under the age of four. At one point, the riveting racehorse had achieved fifteen consecutive wins at the American Derby, where he broke the track record, the Chicago Stake, the Brooklyn Handicap and several others. Buckpasser produced many foals that also became world renowned champions.
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Views of Spring Hill (1903-2021)
Main entrance
Rear view
1906 Belcher-Hyde Map
1932 map
Fortune, June 1932
Spring Hill Today
Remnants of the estate seen before it became a gated community.
The original Phipps gate has been restored as part of the gated community.
1 Comments
There are no pictures of the interior. What was the furniture like? What period did it represent?