Possibly the most historically significant period for the Chinsegut Hill manor house occurred during the stewardship of
Elizabeth,
Raymond and
Margaret Robins. Elizabeth purchased the home for herself and her youngest brother Raymond. But following the purchase and before they had moved in, Raymond met and married Margaret Dreier. Upon their acquisition of the property in 1904, Raymond and Elizabeth renamed the property Chinsegut Hill and set out to improve the grounds. Over the years, Raymond and Margaret added a kitchen to the east wing of the house, a
widow's walk and ventilator, the west chimney, an expanded study, and a music room. The Robins later added four bathrooms (1911), acquired additional land (1917), added the
porte-cochere (1925), and added a fifth bathroom, electricity, and a well (1933). In addition to their tremendous expansion of the property itself, the Robinses were involved in politics. Raymond served as an advisor for all seven US Presidents from
Teddy Roosevelt to
Franklin Delano Roosevelt. During the
Russian Revolution, Raymond was appointed by President
Wilson as the Commissioner of the
American Red Cross Mission to Russia where he met with numerous Russian dignitaries including
Alexander Kerensky,
Leon Trotsky, and
Vladimir Lenin. Raymond was the only American at this time to meet with Lenin and did so four times a week for five months Margaret Robins, 18 year President of the
National Women's Trade Union League, dined with
President Calvin Coolidge in 1923 while her husband was being considered for a cabinet post. In 1928, Raymond was present at the signing of the
Pact of Paris and was called upon to help plan the presidential campaign of
Herbert Hoover. The
Wall Street crash of 1929 left the Robins in financial difficulty because they chose to give almost $250,000 of their money to keep the
First National Bank in Brooksville from folding. Using his connections with
Herbert Hoover and his administration, Raymond brokered a deal to donate the Chinsegut Hill estate to the government with the stipulation that the couple be allowed to live there until their deaths, free of property taxes. After years of illness, Margaret Robins died in 1945. Remaining active in political affairs for several years after his wife's death, Raymond Robins died in 1954. In the same year the
University of Florida signed a four-year lease for the property, intending to use the site as a branch library utilizing Robins' 8,000 volumes.
Famous Guests of Chinsegut Hill During their occupation of the Chinsegut Hill property, the Robinses entertained countless prominent guests including
Soviet ambassadors,
Jane Addams,
William Jennings Bryan,
Thomas Edison,
James Cash Penney,
Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings,
Senator Claude Pepper,
Margaret Bondfield,
Frances Kellor and
U.S. Secretary of the Interior Harold L. Ickes. ==USF lease and use as conference center==