Historic Seven Sisters Home Goes Back On The Market - 27 East

Real Estate News

Real Estate News / 1399551

Historic Seven Sisters Home Goes Back On The Market

icon 3 Photos

author on Sep 15, 2017

If you want to own one of the Seven Sisters in Montauk—the unique and historic homes built by the legendary architecture firm of McKim, Mead & White—now is the time, for a relatively modest $16,250,000. Another one of them, long owned and completely rebuilt after a fire by Dick Cavett, known as Tick Hall, is presently on the market for $62 million.

The property at 153 Deforest Road, which is represented by Sotheby’s International Realty, was put on the market last year with a sale sticker of $18,500,000. Apparently, there were no takers, and now the owners are trying again after a $2.25 million price drop. The 3,800-square-foot residence has 4 bedrooms and 2.5 baths and its 2.3 acres are high enough on the Montauk peninsula to offer a grand view of the Atlantic Ocean. No pool, alas.

Riding on the reputation of having developed Bensonhurst in Brooklyn, and wanting to find more success farther east, in 1879 the real estate magnate Arthur Benson arrived in Montauk and promptly purchased most of it. This was unhappy news to the Montaukett Indians who occupied some of the land—but that’s another story. To construct vacation homes for himself and wealthy buddies, Benson employed Frederick Law Olmstead, who had creating Central Park on his resume, and Stanford White of the design firm cited above. They collaborated on the structures that would become known as the Seven Sisters.

The house just returned to the market was built for William Loring Andrews. For the most part, the claim to fame of this New York businessman was being a founding member, in 1884, of the Grolier Club. It is the oldest bibliophile club in North America, and was named after Jean Grolier de Servieres, Viscount of d’Aguisy, the treasurer general of France whose library was world-famous. The Grolier Club maintains a research library specializing in books, printing, binding, illustration and bookselling. One of its prominent and more unfortunate members was Harry Elkins Widener, a wealthy young bibliophile who perished when the Titanic sank in 1912. As a result, his grieving mother created a library named after her son at Harvard University.

Thinking of visiting the Grolier Club? You’ll find it at 47 East 60th Street in Manhattan.

You May Also Like:

Agency News: Alexis Meadows Joins Michael Lorber Team at Douglas Elliman

Alexis Meadows has joined the Michael Lorber Team, a top-ranking real estate team at Douglas ... 22 Apr 2024 by Staff Writer

Waterview Water Mill Shingle-Style Homes Sells for $11.38 Million

A Water Mill home with a view of Burnett Creek and a dock for access ... 17 Apr 2024 by Staff Writer

Sagaponack New Construction Designed by McDonough & Conroy Sells for $6 Million

A new 8,000-square-foot home in Sagaponack has sold for $6 million preconstruction. On 3.13 acres ... 9 Apr 2024 by Staff Writer

New Book Shows Long Island’s Past With Glimpses of Future

“Making Long Island: A History of Growth and the American Dream,” by Lawrence R. Samuel ... 5 Apr 2024 by Joseph Finora

Good Things Come in Small Packages

While large houses offer more space to spread out in, a new home in East ... 3 Apr 2024 by Brendan J. O’Reilly

Culloden Point Waterfront Home Sells for $12.5 Million

On Montauk’s Culloden Point and fronting Fort Pond Bay, the home at 8 Captain Balfour ... by Staff Writer

Sands Motel in Montauk Sells to Hospitality Group

Montauk’s Sands Motel at 71 South Emerson Avenue has sold to a prominent hospitality group, ... 29 Mar 2024 by Staff Writer

L’Hommedieu Descendants Tour House He Designed in East Hampton

The 1892 Brooklyn Daily Eagle obituary for architect James H. L’Hommedieu referred to him as ... 26 Mar 2024 by Brendan J. O’Reilly

Old Montauk Highway Estate Once Seeking $55 Million Sells for $18.5 Million

A Montauk estate spanning 35 acres with 485 feet of private beachfront has sold for ... by Staff Writer

Coopers Farm Road Home Sells for $4.15 Million

A 5,600-square-foot shingle-style home in Southampton Village built in 1989 recently sold for $4.15 million. ... by Staff Writer