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The Russells and van Rhijns might not be in residence, but these historic homes are still fascinating—and you won’t have to ...
NILES, Ohio – On Oct. 5, 1817, former U.S. president William Howard Taft, along with dozens of prominent business and political leaders from the Mahoning Valley, gathered in Niles to dedicate the ...
The Henry Clay building in downtown Louisville has reopened for events after being closed for over a year. Original plans for a hotel conversion have been scrapped in favor of renovating existing ...
Friends of Henry Clay Frick Posing with the Westmoreland railway car near Eagle Rock, the Frick family summer home in Prides Crossing. Massachusetts, ca. 1915 The Frick Collection Archives.
Since John Singer Sargent and Henry Clay Frick were contemporaries with sympathetic tastes, moving in elite circles, it’s surprising that they never got together for a sitting. The Frick ...
The newly reopened Frick offers entry points for a wide range of visitors, whether they are interested in architecture, design, painting, or simply a transcendent, art-inspired adventure in the city.
The draw? The freshly restored Frick Collection, reopened after a $220 million (approximately £162 million), five-year renovation. This Gilded Age mansion, once the home of industrialist Henry Clay ...
Named after the Frick family’s Pullman train car, Westmoreland is a jewel box of a space on the museum’s second floor. A foyer resembles a moody enchanted garden with a mohair forest green ...
From the beginning, when it was opened in 1916 by Pittsburgh industrialist Henry Clay Frick, the hotel was meant to be a showplace. Inside, the two-story lobby glows with opulence, ...
The Russells and van Rhijns might not be in residence, but these historic homes are still fascinating—and you won’t have to use the servants’ entrance.
Henry Clay Frick, J. P. Morgan, and Henry E. Huntington were collectors whose names still evoke a powerful sense of personal vision. Their legacy remains tangible in the institutions bearing their ...
Friends of art collector Helen Clay Frick, daughter of Henry Clay Frick, in front of his train car, Westmoreland, in Massachusetts around 1915. Courtesy the Frick Collection Archives.