The Longueil family, long associated with the
Parlement of Paris, had been in possession of part of the
seigneurie of Maisons since 1460, and a full share since 1602. Beginning in 1630, and for the next decades,
René de Longueil, first president of the
Cour des aides and then
président à mortier to the
Parlement of Paris, devoted the fortune inherited by his wife, Madeleine Boulenc de Crévecœur (who died in 1636), to the construction of a magnificent château. By 1649, he was able to spend the summer months in his new house, but works on the outbuildings continued after that date.
Louis XIV visited Maisons in April 1651. The attribution to
François Mansart was common knowledge among contemporaries.
Charles Perrault reported its reputation: "The château of Maisons, of which he [Mansart] had made all the buildings and all the gardens, is of such a singular beauty that there is not a curious foreigner who does not go there to see it, as one of the finest things that we have in France." Nevertheless, the sole surviving document mentioning Mansart's name is a payment of 20,000
livres from Longueil in 1657, apparently occasioned by the final completion of the château. A pamphlet with the title
La Mansarade accused the architect of having realised, after completing the construction of the first floor, that he had committed an error in the plans and razed everything built so far in order to commence anew. Perrault emphasizes that the architect had the habit of remodelling certain parts of his buildings more than once in a search for perfection. After the death of René de Longueil, in 1677, the château passed to his heirs until 1732, and then in succession to the marquise de Belleforière, then to the marquis de
Soyécourt. In 1777, it became the property of King
Louis XVI's brother,
Charles Philip, count of Artois, who carried out important interior transformations under the direction of his house architect
François-Joseph Bélanger. These works were interrupted in 1782 for lack of funds. Maisons then ceased to be kept up. Confiscated during the
Revolution as "national goods", the château was sold in 1798 to an army provisioner, M. Lauchère, resold in 1804 to
Marshal of the Empire Jean Lannes, and then resold once again, in 1818, to the Parisian banker
Jacques Laffitte. Starting in 1834, Lafitte proceeded to develop the surrounding park as building lots; he tore down the fine stables to furnish construction materials for the purchasers. After his daughter, the Princesse de la Moskowa, sold the château in 1850, it passed to M. Thomas de Colmar, and to the painter , who farmed out the small park and demolished the entrance gateway to the forecourt, enclosing the severely reduced space with a wrought-iron
grille brought from the
Château de Mailly in
Picardy. Grommé died in 1900. In his last will, he ordered his whole property to the city of
Viipuri, which decided to keep his art collection but sell the château. In 1905, the State purchased the château to save it from demolition. It was classed as a
monument historique in 1914. == Architecture ==