Private estates for the public: the management and interpretation of American country houses as public-facing properties

Date
2021
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Delaware
Abstract
As a distinct category of historic house museums and significant repositories of material, architectural, and social history, country houses are an important aspect of a nation’s cultural heritage. In the context of America, the sprawling estates that once served as the private homes of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century industrialists now provide windows into the domestic lifestyles of the nation’s Gilded Age elite for twenty-first-century visitors. While scholars have studied the various afterlives of English country houses, the transitions of American country houses into public-facing properties have received less attention. This thesis utilizes case studies to assess the various management models and interpretive strategies employed by three American country houses (the Winterthur Museum, the Biltmore Estate, and the Crane Estate on Castle Hill) as they transitioned from private estates to more accessible public sites in the mid-twentieth century. By tracing the decisions made at these properties during their institutional origins, this thesis not only evaluates each transition’s lasting impact on the present-day iteration of these country houses but also identifies valuable strategies that can be applied to country houses and other historic houses that may be struggling to survive in the twenty-first century, including the Ardrossan Estate. As it is unsustainable for Ardrossan to remain in private family ownership, the property faces an uncertain future and this thesis ultimately identifies and suggests avenues to ensure Ardrossan’s sustainability into the future as a public-facing property.
Description
Keywords
Ardrossan, Biltmore, Castle Hill, Country house studies, Winterthur
Citation