Vanderbilt Properties

Cornelius Vanderbilt II (1843–1899)

  • Cornelius Vanderbilt II House (townhouse), 1 West 57th St, Manhattan, NYC (1883) (demolished) Wikipedia

  • The Breakers, Newport, Rhode Island (1892–1895) Wikipedia

  • Oakland Farm, Portsmouth, Rhode Island (1893) (demolished) Wikipedia

Margaret Louisa Vanderbilt Shepard (1845–1924)

  • Vanderbilt Triple Palace townhouse, 2 West 52nd St, Manhattan, NYC (1882) (demolished) Wikipedia

  • Woodlea, Scarborough, New York (1892–1895) (now Sleepy Hollow Country Club) Wikipedia

William Kissam Vanderbilt (1849–1920)

  • Petit Chateau, 660 Fifth Avenue, NYC (1882) (demolished 1926) Wikipedia

  • Idle Hour (Oakdale, Long Island, NY) — original built 1878–79 (burned 1899); rebuilt 1900–01 Wikipedia

  • Marble House, Newport, Rhode Island (1888–1892) Wikipedia

  • Château Vanderbilt, Carrières-sous-Poissy, France (1907) Wikipedia

Emily Thorn Vanderbilt (1852–1946)

  • Vanderbilt Triple Palace townhouse, 642 Fifth Avenue, NYC (1882) (demolished) Wikipedia

  • Elm Court, Lenox, Massachusetts (1887) Wikipedia

Florence Adele Vanderbilt Twombly (1854–1952)

  • Townhouse, 684 Fifth Avenue, NYC (1883) (demolished) Wikipedia

  • Florham, Convent Station, New Jersey (1894–1897) Wikipedia

  • Vinland, Newport, Rhode Island (now part of Salve Regina University) Wikipedia

  • Townhouse, 1 East 71st Street, NYC (70-room house) (demolished) Wikipedia

Frederick William Vanderbilt (1856–1938)

  • Hyde Park (Vanderbilt Mansion / Vanderbilt Mansion National Historic Site), Hyde Park, New York (1896–1899) Wikipedia+1

  • Rough Point, Newport, Rhode Island (1892) Wikipedia

  • Pine Tree Point (Great Camp), Upper St. Regis Lake, Adirondacks, NY (1901) Wikipedia

  • Sonogee, Bar Harbor, Maine (1903; purchased/renovated 1915) Wikipedia

Eliza Osgood “Lila” Vanderbilt Webb (1860–1936)

  • Shelburne Farms, Shelburne, Vermont (1899) Wikipedia

  • Townhouse, 680 Fifth Avenue, NYC (1883) (demolished) Wikipedia

  • NaHaSaNe (Great Camp), Lake Lila, Adirondacks, NY (1893) Wikipedia

George Washington Vanderbilt II (1862–1914)

  • Townhouse, 9 West 53rd Street, NYC (1887) (demolished) Wikipedia

  • Biltmore (Biltmore Estate), Asheville, North Carolina (1888–1895) Wikipedia+1

  • George Washington Vanderbilt Houses (“Marble Twins”), 645 & 647 Fifth Avenue, NYC (1902–1905) (647 survives; 645 replaced by Olympic Tower) Wikipedia

  • Pointe d’Acadie, Bar Harbor, Maine (1869; purchased/renovated 1889) (demolished 1952) Wikipedia

William Kissam Vanderbilt II (1878–1944)

  • Townhouse at 660 Fifth Avenue, NYC (1905) (demolished) Wikipedia

  • Deepdale, Great Neck, Long Island, New York (1904) Wikipedia

  • Eagle’s Nest, Centerport, New York (1910–1936) Wikipedia

  • Alva Base, Fisher Island, Florida (1941) Wikipedia

Consuelo Vanderbilt (1877–1964)

  • Casa Alva, Palm Beach, Florida (1934) Wikipedia

  • Cara-Mia, Southampton, New York (1900) Wikipedia

  • Sunderland House, London, England (1904) Wikipedia

Harold Stirling Vanderbilt (1884–1970)

  • Rock Cliff, Newport, Rhode Island (1870) Wikipedia

  • Eastover, Manalapan, Florida (1930) Wikipedia

Reginald Claypoole Vanderbilt (1880–1925)

  • Sandy Point Farm, Portsmouth, Rhode Island (1902) Wikipedia

  • Townhouse, 12 East 77th Street, Manhattan, NYC (1896) Wikipedia

Cornelius Vanderbilt III (1873–1942)

  • Vanderbilt Triple Palace townhouse, 640 Fifth Avenue, NYC (1882; renovated 1914) (demolished c. 1945)Wikipedia

  • Beaulieu, Newport, Rhode Island (1859; bought by Vanderbilt in 1911) Wikipedia

Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt (1877–1915)

  • Sagamore Camp, Adirondack Mountains, New York (1897) Wikipedia

  • Oakland Farm (remodeled/expanded 1901), Portsmouth, Rhode Island Wikipedia

  • Vanderbilt Hotel (penthouse residence), Park Ave & 34th St, Manhattan, NYC (1913) Wikipedia

Gladys Vanderbilt Széchenyi (1886–1965)

  • Oermezo Castle, Zemplén County, Hungary (1700; 4,000-acre estate) Wikipedia

  • Lagoshara Pusbla (4,300 acres), Somogy County, Hungary Wikipedia

  • Townhouse, 14 Eötvös Street, Budapest, Hungary Wikipedia

Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney (1875–1942)

  • William C. Whitney Mansion, 871 Fifth Avenue, Manhattan, NYC (1883) (demolished) Wikipedia

  • The Reef, Newport, Rhode Island (1885) Wikipedia

  • Applegreen, Old Westbury, New York (1902) Wikipedia

Other Important Properties