•
Arden House: the 100,000 sq ft mansion of railroad magnate
Edward Henry Harriman in
Harriman, New York •
Boldt Castle: legendary island estate, one of America's largest private residences •
Boscobel: the
Federal style estate of States Dyckman by the
Hudson River in
Garrison, New York •
Camp Pine Knot: the earliest of the Great Camps of the
Adirondacks, a National Historic Landmark •
Charles W. Goodyear House; home of lawyer and businessman
Charles W. Goodyear in
Buffalo, New York •
Coindre Hall: the 30,000 square foot mansion of pharmaceutical magnate George McKesson Brown in
Huntington, New York •
Coe Hall: the 67-room mansion of
William R. Coe in
Oyster Bay, New York •
Cornelius Vanderbilt II House: the largest private residence ever constructed in
New York City was home to the eldest grandson of tycoon
Cornelius Vanderbilt •
Dark Island: fantasy castle by
Ernest Flagg "(Singer Castle") •
Eagle's Nest: the residence of
William Kissam Vanderbilt II in
Centerport, New York, now home to a museum and planetarium •
Edgewater: in Barrytown, New York, built about 1825. • The
Frick Collection: former residence of steel magnate
Henry Clay Frick, adjacent
Central Park in
Manhattan,
New York City •
Gracie Mansion: official residence of
New York City's mayor •
Grey Gardens, former home of
Edith "Big Edie" Ewing Bouvier Beal, cousin of
Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis,
Edith "Little Edie" Bouvier Beal,
Ben Bradlee, former Editor-in-Chief of the Washington Post during the
Pentagon Papers and the
Watergate scandal and
Sally Quinn •
Harriet Phillips Bungalow •
Harbor Hill: the
Gold Coast, Long Island estate of
Clarence Hungerford Mackay was one of the 10 largest residences in America •
Hempstead House: the massive Gould-Guggenheim estate, and now park, on Long Island's gold coast in
Sands Point, New York •
Hyde Park: the
Hudson Valley estate of Frederick W. Vanderbilt. •
Indian Neck Hall: a Georgian-style country residence of
Frederick Gilbert Bourne located on the Great South Bay in
Oakdale, New York • Inisfada: the huge
Tudor Revival mansion of
Nicholas Frederic Brady on
Long Island •
Kykuit: the residence of oil tycoon
John D. Rockefeller in
Tarrytown on the
Hudson River •
Lower East Side Tenement Museum, a six-story brick
tenement building that was home to an estimated 7,000 people, from over 20 nations, between 1863 and 1935, in
New York City. •
Mills Mansion: the
Beaux-Arts mansion of financier Ogden Mills on the
Hudson River in
Staatsburg, New York. •
Oheka Castle: also known as the Otto Kahn Estate, it is a large country estate located on the Gold Coast of Long Island's north shore, at Huntington, Suffolk County, New York, and was the residence of financier and philanthropist
Otto Kahn •
Petit Chateau: a
Châteauesque mansion for
William Kissam Vanderbilt and
Alva Vanderbilt at 660 Fifth Avenue, New York City •
Red Maples: in the Village of Southampton, New York. •
Rose Hill Mansion: a restored
Greek Revival mansion, a National Historic Landmark on Seneca Lake near Geneva, New York •
Sagamore Camp: one of the Great Camps of the Adirondacks, a National Historic Landmark •
Sagamore Hill (House): the home of President
Theodore Roosevelt in
Cove Neck, New York •
Santanoni Preserve: one of the Great Camps of the Adirondacks, a National Historic Landmark •
Springwood Estate: a
Federal and
Italianate mansion in
Hyde Park, New York; the birthplace, lifelong home, and burial place of
Franklin D. Roosevelt; added as a National Historic Site in 1945 •
Templeton: the
Georgian Revival mansion of
Alfred I. du Pont in
Brookville, New York, now the DeSeversky Conference Center. •
Westbrook: the
Long Island mansion of
William Bayard Cutting. •
Winfield Hall: the ornate former residence of
Frank Winfield Woolworth on Long Island in
Glen Cove, New York ==North Carolina==