Basement • Laundry • Staff's restrooms
First floor •
Entrance foyer • '''Gentlemen's reception room''' • '''Ladies' reception room''' •
Great hall () – Over each of the six doors that lead from the Great Hall are
limestone figure groups celebrating humanity's progress in art, science, and industry:
Galileo, representing science;
Dante, representing literature;
Apollo, representing the arts;
Mercury, representing speed and commerce;
Richard Morris Hunt, representing architecture; and
Karl Bitter, representing sculpture. •
Main staircase •
Arcade •
Library – The library has
coffered ceilings painted with a dolphin, symbolic of the sea and hospitality, supported by
Circassian walnut paneling impressed with gold leaf in the form of a leather-bound book. Between the ceiling and the gold paneling lies green Spanish leather embossed with gold, which continues into the library from the alcove used for cards. Inside the central library are two busts: a bronze of William Henry Vanderbilt II, the oldest child of Cornelius II and Alice, who died of typhoid at the age of 21 while attending
Yale University; and a marble of Cornelius Vanderbilt II. The fireplace, taken from a 16th-century French chateau (
Arnay-le-Duc, Burgundy), bears the inscription "I laugh at great wealth, and never miss it; nothing but wisdom matters in the end." (
Alice Claypoole Vanderbilt) and her daughters,
Gladys Vanderbilt Széchenyi and
Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, having tea in the library at The Breakers, Newport, Rhode Island,
William Bruce Ellis Ranken, 1932 at The Breakers •
Music room – The room's open interior was used for recitals and dances. Its woodwork and furnishings were designed by Richard Van der Boyen and completed by
Jules Allard and Sons. The room has a gilt coffered ceiling lined with silver and gold, as well as an elliptical ceiling molding which bears the inscription in French of song, music, harmony and melody. Around the edge are the names of well-known composers. The fireplace is of
Campan marble and the tables were designed to match. Mr. Vanderbilt was known to play the violin and Mrs. Vanderbilt the piano, which is a
Second Empire French mahogany
ormolu mounted piano. wall decor in the Morning room •
Morning room – Designed by the French company head Jules Allard, this communal sitting room faces east to admit the morning sun, and was used throughout the day. Placed around the room are platinum-leafed panels illustrated with 8 of the 9 muses. All interior woodwork and furnishings were designed and constructed in France, then shipped to America before assembly. •
Lower loggia •
Billiards room – Designed in the style of ancient Rome, this room shows
Richard Morris Hunt’s competence in stone works. The great slabs of Cippolino marble from Italy form the walls, while rose
alabaster arches provide contrast. Throughout the room there is an assortment of semi-precious stones, forming
mosaics of acorns (the Vanderbilt family emblem, intended to show strength and longevity) and billiards balls on the top walls. The
Renaissance style mahogany furniture provides further contrast with that of the colored marble. •
Dining room – The dining room is the house's grandest room and has 12 freestanding rose alabaster
Corinthian columns supporting a colossal carved and gilt
cornice. Rich in allegory, this room serves as an exemplar of what 19th-century technology could do with Roman ideas and 18th-century inspiration. On the ceiling, the goddess
Aurora is depicted bringing in the dawn on a four-horse chariot as Greek figures pose majestically. A 16th-century style table of carved oak seats up to 34. Two
Baccarat crystal chandeliers light the room with either gas or electricity, and 18, 22 or 24 carat gold gilt is adhered to the wall with
rabbit-skin glue. •
Breakfast room – The breakfast room, with its modified
Louis XV style paneling and furnishings, was used for family morning meals. The furnishings, colors and gilt, although still extravagant in their use, contrast with the dining room's more lavish decoration. •
Pantry – A central
dumbwaiter brought additional china and glassware down from the
mezzanine level. The pantry was also used for the storage of the family's table silver; this was brought with the family when they traveled, and stored in a steel vault. An intercom system allows the butler to direct the necessary servants to their needed locations, and each number on the caller corresponds to a number on a room. •
Kitchen – The kitchen, unlike others in the time period, was situated on the first floor away from the main house to prevent the possibility of fires and cooking smells reaching the main parts of the house. The well-ventilated room supports a cast iron stove, which heats up as a single element through a coal burning stove. The work table is made of
zinc, a metal which served as the forerunner to stainless steel; in front of it is a marble mortar used to crush various ingredients. Ice cut in winter from the local ponds kept the side rooms cool where food was stored, and facilitated a colder room for the assembling of
confections. The kitchen and baking pantry each have one dumbwaiter that travels to the basement level where groceries were delivered and refuse removed.
Second floor • '''Mr. Vanderbilt's bedroom''' – As with the rest of the second floor, Ogden Codman designed this room, choosing
Louis XIV Style. The bed is made of carved walnut and the mantel is of rouge royal marble, which hosts a large mirror above to bring more light into the room. There is much memorabilia of family and friends, though Cornelius Vanderbilt II lived only a year at the Breakers in good health, before dying the following year, 1899, of a stroke. • '''Mrs. Vanderbilt's bedroom''' – A perfect oval, Alice Vanderbilt's room has multiple doors connecting it to other bedrooms. Four closets allowed for her possible seven clothing changes per day, and a pager to administer and delegate family needs to the servants. This room also served as her study and had many bookshelves. Additionally, there are discreetly designed corridors that permitted female servants to maintain the laundry and costume needs of the family in a seemingly invisible fashion. • '''Miss Gertrude Vanderbilt's bedroom''' –
Gertrude, daughter of Cornelius II and Alice, was a less conforming character who wished to be loved for her personality rather than her wealth and family; later she found her match in
Harry Payne Whitney and became an artist. Multiple pieces of her artwork are featured in the room, including "The Engineer", which was inspired by her brother during
World War I, "Laborer", and another that commemorates the American Expeditionary Force of World War I. She moved into The Breakers when she was 19. Above her bed is a portrait of her at age 5 by
Raimundo de Madrazo y Garreta, and beside it, to the left of the bed, a sketch of her as a young woman. •
Upper loggia – Opening east to the Atlantic, the upper
loggia served as an informal living room. During the summer the glass doors overlooking the great hall could be opened to allow a breezeway. The walls are painted marble, and the ceiling is designed to depict three
canopies covering the sky. The lawn, designed by James and Ernest Bowdwitch, hosted many parties and was well kept by a gardening staff of 20, who also introduced and maintained various non-indigenous trees. •
Guest bedroom – This room exemplifies the
Louis XVI style through furniture, woodwork and light fixtures, with
Neoclassical style abounding in the interior. The wall paneling has never been retouched, though the rest of the room has been restored by the preservation society. • '''Countess Szechenyi's bedroom''' – Designed by
Ogden Codman in 18th-century simple elegance style, this room features an ivory and cream-colored motif. and a small kitchen converted from a former housekeeper's room. Access from the museum floors open to the public was said to initially have blocked with infant safety-gate on a staircase connecting the second and third storeys. Following the sale of The Breakers to the Preservation Society of Newport in 1972, Gladys Vanderbilt's daughter Countess Sylvia Szapary was granted a life tenancy of her mother's private apartment on the third floor of the house. Her descendants continued to maintain the apartment until 2018, and this part of the house was eventually opened for public tours in 2024.
Attic floor The attic floor contained more staff quarters, general storage areas, and the innovative
cisterns. One smaller cistern supplied hydraulic pressure for the 1895
Otis elevator, still functioning in the house even though the house was wired for electricity in 1933. Two larger cisterns supplied fresh and salt water to the many bathrooms in the house. Over the grand staircase is a
stained glass skylight designed by artist
John La Farge. Originally installed in the Vanderbilts' 1 West 57th Street (
New York City) townhouse dining room, the skylight was removed in 1894 during an expansion of that house.
Materials • Foundation: brick, concrete, and
limestone • Trusses: steel • Walls: Indiana limestone • Roof: red
terra cotta tile • Wall panels:
platinum leaf (eight reliefs of
mythological figures only) • Other:
marble (plaques),
wrought iron (gates and fences)
The architect The Breakers was designed by
Richard Morris Hunt, one of the country's most influential architects. It is regarded as a definitive expression of American
Beaux-Arts architecture. Hunt's final project, it is also one of his few surviving works, and is valued for its architectural excellence. The home made Hunt the "dean of American architecture", as he was called by his contemporaries, and helped define the
Gilded Era in American history. ==Media==