The estate is formally called Pocantico or Pocantico Hills, but is usually referred to by the name of its mansion, Kykuit. It occupies an area of . During much of the 20th century, the estate featured a resident workforce of security guards, gardeners, and laborers, and had its own farming, cattle, and food supplies. It has a nine-hole, reversible golf course, and at one time had 75 houses and 70 private roads, most designed by John D. Rockefeller Sr. and his son. A longstanding witticism about the estate quips: "It's what God would have built, if only He had the money". In 1901, John D. Rockefeller Sr. hired golf course architect Willie Dunn, the designer of
Shinnecock Hills Golf Club, to build a golf course on the grounds. In late 1946, two of Junior's sons,
John D. Rockefeller III and
Laurance Rockefeller, each offered their respective residences, Fieldwood Farm and Rockwood Hall, as headquarters for the then newly formed
United Nations. Family patriarch Rockefeller Junior vetoed the proposals, as the sites were too isolated from Manhattan. He instead tasked his second son, Nelson, to buy a site along the
East River in New York City, which was subsequently donated for the construction of the
UN Headquarters. Among guests hosted by Nelson and his brother
David have been American Presidents
Lyndon B. Johnson,
Richard M. Nixon,
Gerald Ford, and
Ronald Reagan, and their wives. Other notable visitors have included United Nations Secretary-General
Kofi Annan, President of the Republic of South Africa
Nelson Mandela, Shah of Iran
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi,
King Hussein of Jordan, President
Anwar Sadat of Egypt, and
Lord Mountbatten of Burma of the United Kingdom. , 10 or so Rockefeller families lived within the estate, in the central compound and beyond. Much land has been donated over the decades to New York State, including the
Rockefeller State Park Preserve, and is open to the public for horseback riding, biking, and jogging. The private Rockefeller burial ground at Kykuit abuts, but is not part of, the public
Sleepy Hollow Cemetery. The plot is reserved for members of the
John D. Rockefeller Jr. branch of the family. Family members and descendants of
William Rockefeller Jr. are buried at
Rockwood Circle in the Sleepy Hollow Cemetery.
Residences Within the park: • "Hawes House", home of
Nelson Rockefeller • "Kent House", home of
Laurance Rockefeller Outside the park: • "Abeyton Lodge", home of John D. Rockefeller Jr., demolished when he occupied Kykuit after his father's death • "Fieldwood Farm", home of
John D. Rockefeller III • "Hillcrest", a
Rockefeller University property, formerly the mansion built for
Martha Baird Rockefeller, second wife of John D. Rockefeller Jr., and current location of the 3-story underground bunker housing the Rockefeller Archive Center • "Hudson Pines", former home of
David Rockefeller, just north of the Park (), originally built for and occupied by his only sister,
Abby; sold after his death for $33 million, it is a private property; 60 acres of the estate land are under permanent protection from development through a
conservation easement • "Hunting Lodge", second home of Nelson Rockefeller • "
Rockwood Hall", originally the property of John D. Rockefeller Sr.'s brother,
William Rockefeller, and currently part of the
Rockefeller State Park Preserve Notable outbuildings • The Pocantico Conference Center of the
Rockefeller Brothers Fund (RBF), in the Park, where there are regular conferences. : Originally the "Coach Barn", a three-story complex ultimately redesigned and completed during 1913–14, in heavy stone from the local area, it was the first new structure built on the estate. It is three times the size of the Kykuit mansion. It still houses an impressive collection of horse-drawn carriages, and an equally noteworthy collection of 12 family-owned
vintage cars for public viewing, graphically illustrating the development of automotive design from the early to the mid-twentieth century. :In 1994, with funding from David Rockefeller and brother Laurance, its lower floor was converted by the New Haven architects Herbert S. Newman and Partners into a modern, fully equipped meeting facility for the Fund's conferences, with limited overnight accommodations on the upper floor. The facilities, furthering the projects and objectives of the RBF through conferences, seminars, workshops and retreats for RBF staff, are also available to both domestic and foreign nonprofit organizations, including annual gatherings of all the major foundation presidents and
UN Security Council officials, among numerous other dignitaries. • The "Playhouse", the family seat. In the park, this is the location, since 1994, of the regular semi-annual family meetings, in June and December. :A rambling French Norman two-story structure completed by Junior during 1927, this structure is also three times the size of the Kykuit mansion. Standing alongside the nine-hole, reversible golf course, an outdoor swimming pool and two tennis courts, it contains an indoor swimming pool and tennis court, fully equipped basketball gym, squash court, billiard room and full-size bowling alley. It also has dining and living rooms, and a huge reception room resembling an English baronial hall. • The Orangerie, housing
citrus plants, this is modeled after the original at the
Palace of Versailles • The
Marcel Breuer House at Pocantico, a modern house designed by
Marcel Breuer and exhibited at the
Museum of Modern Art as part of the "House in the Museum Garden" exhibit, then disassembled, shipped to, and reassembled at the estate. • Underground Bomb Shelter, the location of cabinet papers and private telephone transcripts delivered to the estate during 1973 - and kept there for an unknown period of time - by the then
Secretary of State,
Henry Kissinger. • The
Stone Barns Center for Food & Agriculture, outside the park, was established by David Rockefeller and his daughter
Peggy Dulany in 2004 in memory of Rockefeller's wife, Peggy. It is a not-for-profit agricultural and educational facility on of farmland, in the middle of the family-donated Rockefeller State Park Preserve, allied to the family-funded Pocantico Central School. It sells organic local produce, meat, and eggs to the nearby public for-profit restaurant, Blue Hill, as well as to local businesses in the Pocantico Hills area. • The Rockefeller Archive Center, a voluminous three-story underground bunker built below the foundations of the Hillcrest mansion of Martha Baird Rockefeller, situated just outside the Park area. This is an impressively equipped repository of 150-plus years of Rockefeller papers, memorabilia, and other outside organizations' collections. It is staffed by ten full-time archivists who patrol -long shelves on rails, and it contains, for researchers, the publicly restricted and expurgated family history. Additionally, family members have had a profound effect on the hamlet of Pocantico Hills, which is situated in the open space of the estate completely surrounded by family-owned land. The
Union Church of Pocantico Hills, now owned by
Historic Hudson Valley, was built by the Rockefeller family, which commissioned stained-glass windows by
Matisse (an abstract
rose window, memorializing Abby Aldrich) and by
Chagall (the remainder of the windows, emphasizing Biblical prophets and some
New Testament themes, and memorializing various members of the family and others). They also helped finance the construction of the local Pocantico Hills School. ==See also==