Ochre Court
(FRENCH FLAMBOYANT GOTHIC)
1888-91
Richard Morris Hunt
Administrative Offices
When Grand Duke Boris, brother-in-law of the Czarina of Russia, was a house
guest of the owners of Ochre Court in the 1890s he exclaimed in wonder, "I have
never dreamt of such luxury as I have seen in Newport!" Commissioned by Gilded
Age banker and developer, Ogden Goelet, as his family's summer residence, Ochre
Court (1888-1892) is the first of a group of spectacular houses in the Grand
Manner designed by Richard Morris Hunt, America's foremost architect of the late
nineteenth century.
For this limestone palace overlooking the reddish seacliffs that give the
estate its name, Hunt drew his inspiration from the late medieval period in
French architecture. With its high roofs, turrets, whimsical gargoyles, and tall
chimneys, Ochre Court recalls the style of Francois I, a transitional era when
established medieval elements like the pointed Gothic arch and heavy stained
glass were lightened by newly-emerging Renaissance details including rounded
arches and delicate lacy ornamentation.
Inside the mansion, Hunt used details from French Gothic chateaux and churches
to create a Great Hall, which soars upward for three stories and dramatically
frames a seaward vista. Radiating off the Great Hall, both the impressive ground
floor reception rooms and the private upstairs family rooms, which are now
University offices, were richly designed with imported antique fireplaces and
lavish wallcoverings.
The Atlantic Ocean is ever-present, framed by windows and terrace entrances,
reflected in mirrored walls, and repeated in symbolic motifs. Hunt emphasized
the social position of the Goelet family and their patronage of learning and the
arts with exuberant decoration both within the house and on the grounds. In
classical ceiling paintings, royal heraldic devices, carved emblems and statues,
and a rainbow of antique stained glass, the architect signaled his client's
aristocratic status and intellectual interests
The formal gardens and walkways of Ochre Court are shaded by several mature
specimen trees including the dramatic Copper Beech (Fagus sylvatica atropunicea),
a European variety that reaches a height of 80- 90 feet. The exquisite blossoms
of the Kousa Dogwood (Cornus kousa) transform the grounds in June. The dense
flower heads this Far Eastern native are surrounded by creamy-white bracts. The
Goelets were an established American dynasty that had grown from humble
eighteenth century trade into vast nineteenth century investments. Ochre Court
owner Ogden Goelet was not only a noted banker and real estate investor, but one
of the most famous competitive yachtsmen in the world. His wife, Mary Wilson
Goelet, was one of the most important hostesses of her generation in a time when
the operation of Ochre Court during a typical eight-week summer season required
twenty-seven house servants, eight coachmen and grooms, and twelve gardeners.
Their daughter, May, married the English Duke of Roxburghe, taking with her
an $8 million dowry, while their son Robert became a major force in the
development of American railroads, hotels, and real estate. It was his gift of
Ochre Court to the Religious Sisters of Mercy in 1947 that established the then
Salve Regina College in Newport.
A far cry from its Gilded Age splendor, the stately fifty-room mansion was
the entire college for the first few years of Salve Regina's existence. The
original fifty-eight women students lived on the third floor, attended classes
on the second, studied, prayed, and dined on the first, and snacked and
purchased books in the basement. The eight Sisters of Mercy who made up that
post-war faculty established their own modest living area in the servants'
quarters.
As it celebrates its 50th anniversary, Salve Regina University has grown to
encompass over 60 acres and more than two dozen buildings, yet Ochre Court
remains its heart.