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Marblehead Neck, Estate of the Day

Filed under: Estates


The coolest thing about today's property in Marblehead, Massachusetts might not be the house itself but the zen-inspiring tea house perched on the rocky shoreline. The 1.8 acre property has access to a private beach and the main house is on a hilltop with clear ocean views. Well-suited to the picturesque environs, the home is a 1880s renovated Victorian with over 6,000 square feet of living area. The five-bedroom home has been remodeled and has a newer kitchen but rooms like the wood paneled library, ocean-facing living room and the dining room with window seat speak to the home's original charms. The property includes a lower terrace built into the rocks above the Atlantic. This home is listed for $5.9 million.

Peach's Point, Estate of the Day

Filed under: Estates


Spring in New England often arrives with such beauty it seems calculated to make you forget all about winter. This home is on Peach's Point, a private peninsula in Marblehhead, Massachusetts . The home is on two acres facing the Atlantic Ocean and is in walking distance of a sandy beach. The brick and clapboard home was built around 1910 and has been restored and expanded into a modern retreat. There are five bedrooms, six fireplaces, a kitchen with a wood counter, sitting room, exercise room and a brick terrace that faces the ocean. It is listed at $5.9 million.

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Gallery: Peach's Point

New England's Great Estates

Filed under: Decor, Estates, Books


Three centuries worth of New England's magnificent houses and mansions are collected in an equally grand new book from Rizzoli: Great Houses of New England, by Roderic H. Blackburn (text) and Geoffrey Gross (photography). Spanning a wide range of styles, these stately houses are the originals from which many of today's McMansions have been copied. They're more than just artifacts, however; as Blackburn writes, "Through the architecture and decorative arts we see the development of a people and their region."

Among the more splendid examples in the book is the Jeremiah Lee Mansion in Marblehead, Mass., dating from 1767 (pictured here), the impressiveness of which is "conveyed by its subdued monumentality," Blackburn notes. Lee, a shipping merchant, built it to emulate aristocratic estates in England, so you might say not all that much has changed. Also of note are the beautiful brick Georgian Macpheadris-Warner House in Portsmouth, N.H., dating from 1716; Rosecliff, a palatial McKim, Mead & White mansion which was the setting for the movie version of The Great Gasby; and Brookside, a gracious Greek Revival in Orwell, VT. See the gallery for more.

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