All Content from Business Insider 07月19日 22:51
Look inside Glenview, a 19th-century mansion built for a Wall Street financier and featured in HBO's 'The Gilded Age'
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格伦维尤(Glenview)是1877年由华尔街银行家约翰·邦德·特雷弗(John Bond Trevor)建造的镀金时代豪宅,现位于纽约州扬克斯。这座被精心修复的19世纪宅邸,因其华丽的室内陈设和建筑风格,被HBO电视剧《镀金时代》选为拍摄场地,重现了当时名流的生活场景。目前,该宅邸正展出剧中饰演阿斯特夫人的演员唐娜·墨菲(Donna Murphy)的戏服,让参观者身临其境地感受镀金时代的奢华生活与家族故事。格伦维尤不仅是历史爱好者和剧迷的宝地,也为普通大众提供了了解那个时代生活方式的窗口。

⭐ 格伦维尤庄园是19世纪为华尔街百万富翁银行家约翰·邦德·特雷弗及其家人建造的季节性住宅,现由哈德逊河博物馆(Hudson River Museum)精心修复并对外开放参观。其奢华的室内陈设和建筑细节,使其成为HBO热门剧集《镀金时代》的取景地,重现了当时纽约第五大道“百万富翁街”的辉煌生活。

🏛️ 庄园内正举办一项限时展览,展出由演员唐娜·墨菲在《镀金时代》中饰演卡罗琳·舍默霍恩·阿斯特(Caroline Schermerhorn Astor)所穿的戏服。通过将这些精美的服饰置于格伦维尤的历史房间环境中,展览旨在突显历史宅邸与镀金时代生活方式之间的紧密联系,让参观者更直观地理解当时上流社会的社交礼仪和生活细节。

💡 参观格伦维尤庄园,游客可以深入了解特雷弗家族在镀金时代的生活点滴。例如,大厅的木制品由维多利亚时期家具设计师丹尼尔·帕布斯特(Daniel Pabst)打造,地板采用英国Maw and Co.公司的拼花地砖;议事厅的天花板装饰有象征权力的菊花图案,呼应了日本皇室的用法,这些细节都展现了当时主人对生活品质的极致追求。

🚪 庄园的各个房间都充满了历史信息和有趣的设计。例如,会客厅(Parlor)的墙纸模仿了“唯美主义”运动风格,天花板也恢复了原始设计;书房(Ebony Library)的壁炉曾出现在剧中,象征性地表现了阿斯特夫人对派对请柬的态度;而餐厅(Dining Room)的装饰面板和餐边柜则蕴含了伊索寓言中关于好客之道的智慧,这些都为参观者提供了丰富的文化和艺术体验。

Glenview.

For a limited time, fans of HBO's "The Gilded Age" can see Mrs. Astor's costumes from the show on display in the actual Gilded Age mansion where her scenes were filmed.

Glenview, a 19th-century seasonal home built for millionaire banker John Bond Trevor and his family, has been painstakingly restored by the Hudson River Museum in Yonkers, New York. Its ornate furnishings are so well-maintained that HBO used the mansion as a film set to portray Mrs. Caroline Schermerhorn Astor's home on Fifth Avenue's "Millionaires' Row" in "The Gilded Age."

Through October 6, Glenview will host an exhibit of costumes worn by Donna Murphy, who plays Astor in the series.

"Seeing the dresses in the context of Glenview's period rooms will highlight the connections between our historic house and Gilded Age lifestyles of the Trevor family at Glenview and the Astors in New York City," said Laura Vookles, who chairs the Hudson River Museum's curatorial department.

As a fan of "The Gilded Age" and a historic mansion enthusiast, I visited Glenview in July to check out the costumes and learn more about the Trevor family's life at the mansion. Take a look inside.

Glenview is located at the Hudson River Museum in Yonkers, New York.
The Hudson River Museum.

The museum offers guided tours of Glenview from Wednesday through Sunday. Tickets cost $20 per adult and can be purchased on the Hudson River Museum's website.

The home was constructed between 1876 and 1877 for John Bond Trevor, a millionaire banker and stockbroker who worked on Wall Street.
Glenview.

Trevor purchased the 23-acre estate in 1876 and hired architect Charles W. Clinton to design the home.

After his first wife died, leaving him with three children, Trevor moved into Glenview shortly after marrying his second wife, Emily Norwood Trevor.

The Trevors' primary residence was in New York City, but they lived at Glenview from April to December each year. When in residence at Glenview, Trevor commuted into his office on Wall Street in New York City about 23 miles away.

Trevor died in 1890. Norwood remained in the home until her death in 1922, when it was then sold for $400,000, or around $7.6 million in 2025 when adjusted for inflation.

Our first stop on the tour was the Great Hall, where guests would enter the home.
The Great Hall.

The hall featured woodwork by Daniel Pabst, a Victorian furniture designer based in Philadelphia, and an encaustic tile floor designed by the English company Maw and Co.

A portrait of John Bond Trevor, seen right, is also on display in the hall.

Our guide pointed out an ornate calling card holder on an entryway table, where visitors would leave their information if the Trevors weren't available.
Photos of the Trevor family and a calling card holder at Glenview.

During the Gilded Age, members of high society used calling cards to announce their visits and maintain their social standing. When visiting another home, guests would present cards with identifying information to a servant, who would bring them to the mistress of the house to determine if they would be allowed inside. If the mistress wasn't available, guests would leave their cards on a tray.

The Great Hall also featured a grand staircase with the only two remaining original light fixtures in the home.
The grand staircase.

The lights were powered by gas because wealthy Gilded Age socialites believed that gas lighting was the most flattering to a woman's complexion, our tour guide said. When Norwood Trevor descended the staircase to greet guests, she wanted to look her best for her grand entrance.

Once guests were admitted to Glenview, they were welcomed in the parlor.
The parlor.

Guests would have been greeted with live music. The couch and chairs in the parlor are original to the home. Other furnishings included Italian marble sculptures and a stuffed peacock in front of the fireplace.

The museum repainted the parlor's ceilings with the original designs to restore it to the way it looked during the Gilded Age.
Ceiling art in the parlor.

The wallpaper closely resembles the original design the Trevors chose as part of the Aesthetic Movement, which favored simpler, colorful geometric patterns over more ornate Victorian styles.

The parlor appeared in HBO's "The Gilded Age" as Mrs. Astor's house, and features some of her costumes for a limited-time exhibition.
The parlor.

The Hudson River Museum has costumes from "The Gilded Age" worn by Donna Murphy, who portrays Mrs. Astor, on display at Glenview through October 6.

We proceeded into the Ebony Library, which was Trevor's domain as the man of the house.
The Ebony Library.

Trevor used the library as his study. The wooden cabinetry and fireplace were not made of actual ebony wood, but ebonized cherry wood made to look darker.

Fans of "The Gilded Age" may recognize the fireplace from a scene in season one where Mrs. Astor tosses a party invitation from Mrs. Russell into the fire.

The ceiling was decorated with chrysanthemums, a symbol of power used by Japan's imperial family.
Ceiling art in the Ebony Library.

Chrysanthemums appear throughout Glenview, carved into the bricks of the home's exterior and in the pillars on the Grand Staircase.

Next door, the sitting room served as Norwood Trevor's area for entertaining as well as a family room.
The sitting room.

The room's curved floor-to-ceiling windows were a status symbol of wealth in the Gilded Age due to the high price of glass.

Its windows looked out onto stunning views of the Hudson River.
The Hudson River visible from Glenview.

The original home featured a wraparound balcony that could be accessed through the Sitting Room, but it was later removed in order to lower maintenance costs.

The ceiling was decorated with more feminine floral patterns than the Ebony Library.
The ceiling in the sitting room.

Our tour guide said that Norwood Trevor was "obsessed with little gestures of hospitality," and chose the pattern to ensure that women who entered the room felt as comfortable and at home as possible.

A display case featured Mary Trevor's wedding portrait and a fan she held on her wedding day.
Mary Trevor's fan and portrait from her wedding day.

In 1892, the Trevors hosted the wedding reception of their oldest daughter, Mary Trevor. She married Grenville Winthrop, a Harvard Law graduate and attorney, in the Parlor of Glenview.

A chair with a unique detail proved that Trevor also spent time in the sitting room.
A button on a chair in the sitting room.

An original chair in the sitting room featured a button on the arm that allowed it to recline. It was considered unseemly for women to lounge during the Gilded Age, so it would have only been used by Trevor.

The dining room featured another costume from "The Gilded Age," as well as a decorative panel to hide the entrance to the kitchen where servants worked.
A costume from "The Gilded Age" in the dining room at Glenview.

The dining room could seat anywhere from 11 to 18 people for dinner.

The medieval-style furnishings included walnut wainscoting along the walls and painted ceilings.
The dining room.

The dining room features the only remaining original ceiling paintings at Glenview.

A sideboard, also designed by woodworker Daniel Pabst, included a nod to one of Aesop's fables about how to be a gracious host.
A sideboard in the dining room.

In the fable of the fox and the crane, the fox invites the crane for dinner and serves food in a shallow bowl, which the crane can't eat because of its beak. The crane then invites the fox for dinner and presents food in a tall glass, which the fox can't reach with its short snout. The moral of the story is to be hospitable and accommodating to guests.

We ended the tour by returning to the Great Hall, where we stopped by an ornate tiled fireplace.
A fireplace in the Great Hall.

A row of tiles above the fireplace depicted fairytales such as Beauty and the Beast and Rumpelstiltskin, which children could point to and indicate which story they'd like to hear. The bottom of the fireplace showed Guinevere, the wife of the legendary King Arthur.

Glenview's Gilded Age grandeur isn't just for fans of the show — it's for anyone who enjoys history, architecture, and a taste of the finer things in life.
Glenview.

Even if you haven't seen "The Gilded Age," visiting Glenview provides a look into the lives of Gilded Age millionaires outside of New York City, where seasonal estates provided an escape during the warmer months and small gestures of hospitality helped visitors feel at home.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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