Bruce Price Cottage is one of four "cottages" constructed by Bruce Price[2] on Pepperidge Road in Tuxedo Park, New York. Price was the founding architect of the Tuxedo Park estate, where he designed and built a number of the large mansions.[3] Bruce Price Cottage and other constructions in Tuxedo Park were highly influential on the style of Frank Lloyd Wright and other, younger architects.
Bruce Price Cottage | |
Location | 18 Pepperidge Rd., Tuxedo Park, New York |
---|---|
Built | 1897 |
Architect | Bruce Price |
Architectural style | Dutch Colonial |
Part of | Tuxedo Park (ID80002740[1]) |
He constructed the cottage for his wife, Josephine Lee, in 1897.[4] He also constructed Emily Post cottage for their daughter who spent her childhood there. Regular visitors to the house at the time included Pierre Lorillard and William Astor.
Bruce Price Cottage is built in Dutch Colonial Revival style. All four cottages were inherited by Emily.[3] In 1920 she divided the property.
Notable people who have lived in the Bruce Price Cottages include Edwin and Emily Post, Guy and Lory Spier, Robert Norden, and Sutton Foster[5].
References
edit- ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
- ^ Graybill, Samuel H. (1957). Bruce Price, American Architect 1845-93. New Haven: Yale University Press.
- ^ a b Sonne, Christian (2007). Tuxedo Park: The Historic Houses. Tuxedo Historical Society. ISBN 1883789583.
- ^ Rushmore, George M. (1957). The World with a Fence Around it. New York: Pageant Press.
- ^ https://www.architecturaldigest.com/gallery/sutton-foster-step-inside-her-storied-new-york-home
External links
edit- Hudson River Valley Heritage Building Structure Inventory Form