Sunday Morning Walk Home from The Patio – The Speyer Wall

This brick wall runs from what was once the entrance to Philips Laboratories, along Scarborough Road where it continues along Holbrook Road to a second entrance. Most Briarcliff Residents are familiar with the wall, but few know why it’s there.

Inside the wall there used to be a mansion owned by wealthy financier, James Speyer. The mansion stood in a 130 acres estate called Waldheim, which featured sprawling farmlands, a nine-hole golf course, gardens, and a lake. It was landscaped by the Olmstead Brothers, founded by John Charles Olmsted and Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr. the nephew (and adopted son) and son of Frederick Law Olmstead the famous architect of New York’s Central Park.

On the nearest pillar in the first picture above (view looking East) you can make out the word “Wald” and on the nearest pillar in the second picture, below (view looking West) you can make out the word “Heim”.

After Speyer’s death in 1941 the estate was sold in 1946 to be subdivided into residential lots. Although the mansion is long gone, the wall and a few other ruins still remain to remind us that it once existed.

Taken with a Sony RX100 III

Sunday Morning Walk Home from The Patio – Gatehouse to the V. Everit Macy Estate

Almost home. Valentine Everit Macy (March 23, 1871 – March 21, 1930) was an American industrialist and philanthropist, involved in local government. In the 1910s and 1920s, he served in Westchester County, New York, as commissioner of the Department of Charities and Corrections, the Commissioner of Public Welfare, and as Commissioner of Parks. The building in the picture was once the gatehouse to his estate, “Chilmark”. For more on V. Everit Macy see: V. Everit Macy on the Briarcliff Manor-Scarborough Historical Society website.

Taken with a Sony RX100 III

Sunday Morning Walk Home from The Patio – All Saints Episcopal Church

All Saints’ Episcopal Church is a historic Episcopal church in Briarcliff Manor, New York. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2002. John David Ogilby, whose summer estate and family home in Ireland were the namesakes of Briarcliff Manor, founded the church in 1854. The church was built on Ogilby’s summer estate in Briarcliff Manor.

Richard Upjohn designed the church building, which was constructed from 1848 to 1854 and expanded in 1911. The church has several memorial windows, including one by John LaFarge and a rose window by Frederick Wilson of Tiffany Studio.

It’s the second oldest church in the Village and the oldest functioning church since St. Mary’s closed in the 2015. For more pictures see: All Saints Day Service at All Saints Church, Briarcliff Manor.

Taken with a Sony RX100 III

Sunday Morning Walk Home from The Patio – Walter Law’s Mansion

Walter W. Law had begun acquiring property in Briarcliff Manor even before he left W.J. Sloane. In 1891 he purchased this house from the Wolsey family and relocated to Briarcliff Manor where he could be closer to his farming (and other) businesses. Over the years the house went through several incarnations and renovations. The most recent owners: The Begoni Family recently sold the house. Last week we were invited by the person managing the sale to look around and even to take anything from what remained (it all had to be thrown out by the end of the day). Above: Entrance to the Mansion on Scarborough Road.

I took some pictures, but it was all rather sad: the empty rooms, piles of “stuff” on the patio between the house and the fountain – all waiting to be tossed into the garbage skip. Instead of showing those more recent pictures I’m showing these taken back in July 2021.




Taken with a Sony RX100 III

Sunday Morning Walk Home from The Patio – Entrance to what was once the Briarcliff Lodge

Now the entrance to The Club, a senior living community this was once the entrance to The Briarcliff Lodge, a 300+ room luxury resort hotel. It was a notable example of Tudor Revival architecture, and at the time was one of the largest wooden structures in the United States. It was built by Walter W. Law in 1902 and the Law family owned it until 1937. When the lodge opened it was one of the largest resort hotels in the world.

In 1933, the lodge ended year-round service and housed a “health-diet sanitarium” until the Edgewood Park School for Girls began operation there from 1937 to 1954. From 1936 to 1939, the lodge was run again as a hotel in the summer months while the school was closed. From 1955 to 1994, The King’s College used the lodge building and built dormitories and academic buildings. Abandoned and unmaintained after 1994, the Briarcliff Lodge was destroyed between 2003 and 2004.

Although the Lodge is long gone the gates seen in the picture are original and were found some years ago in storage at the Briarcliff Manor Department of Public Works.

Taken with a Sony RX100 III