The conception of a country residence: Shelburne House, 1887-1900

Date
1998
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University of Delaware
Abstract
Shelburne House, the country house of William Seward and Lila Vanderbilt Webb, was built between 1887 and 1900 on the edge of Lake Champlain in northern Vermont. Part of a 4,000-acre agrarian estate called Shelburne Farms, the dwelling was first envisioned as a temporary Shingle-Style structure. However, in lieu of building a palatial Beaux-Arts residence on another estate site, the Webbs eventually decided to modify Shelburne House into an enlarged, highly individualized Queen Anne dwelling. ☐ Shelburne House's complex architectural and decorative evolution both allies it with and distinguishes it from its Vanderbilt cousins, including The Breakers and Biltmore, and other period country residences. Shelburne House reflects the Webbs' conscious attempts to balance their own ideals for a country house with those of their family members and general social conventions. The residence thus exists as an embodiment of three interrelated elements: personal identity, familial allegiance, and nationwide cultural movement.
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