Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Brandegee Estate

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MPS
  
Area
  
7 ha

Added to NRHP
  
17 October 1985

NRHP Reference #
  
85003244

Architectural style
  
Renaissance architecture

Brandegee Estate Brandegee Estate pond with house and pergola Digital Commonwealth

Location
  
Similar
  
Arnold Arboretum, Museum of Fine Arts - Boston, Deer Island Light, Faneuil Hall, The First Church of Christ - Sc

The Brandegee Estate is an historic estate at 280 Newton Street in Brookline and Boston, Massachusetts. Developed at the turn of the 20th century, it is one of the largest essentially intact estate properties in either community. It was developed by Mary (Pratt) Sprague, a direct descendant of Joseph Weld, one of Boston's first settlers, and is noted for its large Renaissance Revival mansion (designed by Little, Brown & Moore), and landscaping by Charles A. Platt. The estate was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985. Its name derives from Mary Sprague's second husband, Edward Brandegee.

Description and history

Brandegee Estate Brandegee Estate pond with house and pergola Digital Commonwealth

The Brandegee Estate is located astride the town line between Brookline and the Jamaica Plain neighborhood of Boston, and consists of a long strip of land whose western end is on Newton Street in Brookline, and whose eastern end is on Allandale Street in Boston. Separating most of the estate from Allandale Street to the south is Allandale Farm, the last working farm in Boston. The developed features are the main house and formal garden, near the center of the estate, and a cluster of service buildings at the eastern end, where the stables and estate office are located. The stables were until recently used by the city of Boston for its mounted police force.

Brandegee Estate Conservation in Action Juno Museum of Fine Arts Boston

The property was owned for many years by the Faulkner family, and was known as Faulkner Farm. It was acquired by William Fletcher Weld II, cousin to Mary Spratt Sprague. In 1890 Sprague had built a 2-1/2 story wood frame summer house. In 1897 she retained Little, Brown & Moore to oversee a major expansion of the house, transforming it into a brick Renaissance Revival mansion. The house is surrounded by a formal garden designed by Charles A. Platt, many of whose elements still survive despite adaptive reuse of the property.

Brandegee Estate 3bpblogspotcomXx0N7O1X5XQTTeuJzW5zrIAAAAAAA

The 3-1/2 story mansion built in 1897, enclosing an 1890 house that had been built on the site by Mary Pratt Sprague (later Mrs. Edward Brandegee). The mansion has elaborate interior decorations, including a dining room paneled in mahogany, a second dining room in oak, and a ballroom with elaborate candelabras and chandeliers, with tapestries by Gobelins. The house stands on a slight rise, looking over a landscaped formal garden, which included a pool and an open summer house.

Brandegee Estate Brandegee Estate Wikipedia

Brandegee Estate SAH ARCHIPEDIA

References

Brandegee Estate Wikipedia