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Built in 1926 for Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kelley King, the 47-acre estate opened as a public garden in 1953, one year after Mr. King's death. Mr. King, who was married and divorced twice, never had children. He left most of his estate to the private foundation that continues to operate Kingwood Center today. Mr. King made his fortune in Mansfield, Ohio working with the Ohio Brass Company. Hired as the company's first electrical engineer in 1893, he led Ohio Brass into new ventures, particularly the manufacture of electrical fittings for railroads and trolleys. Mr. King eventually became President and Chairman of the Board of Ohio Brass.

 

The King home was designed by prominent Cleveland architect Clarence Mack, who made a career of building fashionable homes in Lakewood and Shaker Heights, Ohio and in Grosse Pointe, Michigan. Displaced by the Great Depression, Mack began a second successful career in 1935 designing residences in and around Palm Beach, Florida. Today the King home is used, as Mr. King directed, to house a horticultural library and the administrative offices of Kingwood Center. Much of the main floor, however, is on display in a manner similar to its original arrangement with many of Mr. King's furnishings.

 

The grounds were designed by the Cleveland landscape architecture firm of Pitkin and Mott the same year as the completion of the house, 1926. William Pitkin Jr., who was apparently the senior partner, had a long career designing other country estates, new communities (e.g. Upper Arlington, Ohio), and college campuses.

 

Pitkin was probably also affected by the Great Depression. He began a second career in 1936 when he moved back to his home town of Rochester, New

York to replace his father as President of Chase-Pitkin Nurseries.

 

http://www.kingwoodcenter.org/our_history.html

 

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Beautiful pics!

 

The house looks like it could have been built in the 1980's though.

^I know. The architect really should have thought of that.

 

LOL

Beautiful!

Ohio's Vizcaya! Okay not quite but very nice.

Neat!

"You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers

Looks nice!

Thanks, the rooms (that are open to the public) are really nice. I would have taken pictures, but they closed at five. If any of you are ever in/around Mansfield I suggest checking Kingwood out.

Very nice.  I can totally see this fitting in on my parents street.

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