Monica Randall grew up on the Gold Coast of Long Island and was fascinated by the massive estates and their tantalizing stories. Millionaire F. W. Woolworth built Winfield, the grandest of its manors in the 1910s. On a clear day, you can see the New York City skyline from its balustraded roof, yet for nearly a century few have been allowed to enter its gates. In the 1960s Monica was living in one of the fabled mansions built by a Five-and-Dime heiress. While there, she began a career scouting locations for movie; she used many of the surrounding estates including Winfield. After a brief incarnation as a charm school, Winfield was closed and auctioned off. At the auction, Monica met a mysterious European businessman, who bought the house. After a whirlwind romance, they became engaged, and Monica moved in to Winfield, only to have her suspicions confirmed: Winfield is haunted. Amid magnificent gilded carvings and marble, a labyrinth of secret passageways, hidden chambers, and deserted tunnels help reveal the true nature of its eccentric builder. Through exhaustive research and countless interviews, Monica gradually uncovered stories of the Woolworths' sad past: the suicide of Edna Woolworth (Barbara Hutton's mother), Woolworth's obsession with Napoleon and the Egyptian occult, and the rumors surrounding the unsolved fire which burnt the first Winfield to the ground. This riveting memoir explores the culture and history of an era gone by, filled with enthralling stories of infamous scandals and breathtaking Gilded Age tales of New York society. Captivating and impossible to put down, this book will enchant readers everywhere. Throughout the last fifty years the Gold Coast mansions were regularly razed for subdevelopments; Winfield is the last of the marble palaces still standing.
I just loved this book. Having read and loved Monica Randall's book [first edition] Mansions of the Long Island Gold Coast I was especially interested in reading more about her adventures on the North Shore of Long Island. I wasn't disappointed. This book is well written and offers a wonderful view into Monica Randall's life as she worked, sometimes undercover of night, to document and save the mansions and their contents. Her story is a haunting tale that focuses on Winfield, her connections to it, and the brief time she spent living in it, while sharing her connection with other of the famous mansions, both lost and saved.
Winfield: Living in the Shadow of the Woolworths
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 19 years ago
This book is a must for anyone who in interested in History and has empathy for old houses. I enjoyed this book tremedously and could not put it down. Ms Randall has certainly researched her subject extremely well, and has made Winfield, and all the other houses on the Gold Coast come alive. The lifestyles of the families who inhabited these houses are fascinating. One is left with a clear understanding of Ms. Randall's sympathy for these beautiful old places, and a sense of sadness also for the loss and dereliction of so many of these national treasures. Winfield is a wonderful story and would make a wonderful movie.
Outstanding; a true page turner!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 19 years ago
The author begins by pulling you into the horror she feels at watching the famed Gold Coast mansions be razed to make way for new development. I found myself drawn into the activities of the Gold Coast Rescue Club which used just about every trick in the book, so to speak, to rescue what artifacts they could from the crumbling and neglected mansions and related outbuildings. (You'll be amazed at what they manage to rescue from obscurity) This is a fascinating story, not just of Woolworth and his eccentricities or Winfield Manor, but of a life long love of the architectural monuments from an era that has long since come and gone. The story weaves from her adolescent years to living in a Woolworth heiress mansion to meeting and falling in love with the man who purchased Winfield in the late 70's and her subsequent move into the estate. Don't confuse this as an all encompassing narrative on Woolworth, his family or Winfield. Rather, it's a gripping story of one woman's love of an era and her involvement with one particular magnificent Gold Coast Mansion.
Excellent story blended with history!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
Winfield is one of the best books I have read in a while. It has a great combination of history and the authors direct experience, revolving around the mansion built and lived in by F.W. Woolworth. Anyone from the area (Long Island) will enjoy this book that much more! The story is well written and the novels reads with a very nice flow. The book also has enough clues to help you find the mansion, should you have the urge to search it out... (By the way as of today, 10/19/04, the mansion is on the market for a cool $20 million). Enjoy!
I enjoyed this ghost story ...
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
This was exactly what I was looking for: a nicely written, page-turning ghost story. The perfect summer beach vacation book --- or anytime, for that matter. Just don't read this before going to bed.
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