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Notleymere

Bed and breakfasts in New York (state)Houses completed in 1889Houses in Madison County, New YorkHouses on the National Register of Historic Places in New York (state)Madison County, New York Registered Historic Place stubs
National Register of Historic Places in Cazenovia, New YorkQueen Anne architecture in New York (state)Robert W. Gibson buildingsShingle Style architecture in New York (state)Shingle Style houses
Notleymere
Notleymere

Notleymere (1885–89), also known as the Frank Norton estate, is a historic house located on the eastern shore of Cazenovia Lake in Cazenovia, Madison County, New York. The large, Shingle Style "summer cottage" was designed by architect Robert W. Gibson. It is a picturesque, asymmetrically massed, 3+1⁄2-story structure, sheathed in dark-stained wooden shingles and covered by a steeply pitched, multi-gabled, shingle roof. It features two tall, corbelled brick chimneys and a three-story polygonal turret.The property was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1991.After acting as a Bed and breakfast for years, it was purchased in 2013. It was extensively remodeled in 2014–2015, updating the historic house to be used as a private residence owned by the DiFulgentiz family. Several hundred yards north of it is another "summer cottage" on the National Register, Ormonde.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Notleymere (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Notleymere
East Lake Road,

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Wikipedia: NotleymereContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.947777777778 ° E -75.863055555556 °
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Address

East Lake Road 4639
13035
New York, United States
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Notleymere
Notleymere
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Ormonde (Cazenovia, New York)

Ormonde (1885–88) is a Shingle Style country house built on the eastern shore of Cazenovia Lake in Cazenovia, New York. It was designed by architect Frank Furness for George R. Preston, a New Orleans banker who settled in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The 9-bedroom "summer cottage" was originally the centerpiece of a 300-acre (121.4 ha) estate, that was expanded to 400 acres (161.8 ha) early in the 20th century. The carriagehouse and other buildings have since been demolished, and the land subdivided, leaving the main house and boathouse on 2.4 acres (1 ha). The boathouse's design is unusual: a square stone ground floor at lake's edge supporting a circular shingled second floor, ringed by a 360-degree deck. It relates to Furness's Undine Barge Club (1882–83) on Philadelphia's Boathouse Row, and the architect's own summer cottage, Idlewild (c. 1890), in Media, Pennsylvania. The property was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1991. In addition to the main house and boathouse, it includes one non-contributing building. Ormonde is "architecturally and historically important as an outstanding early example of the type of large mansions constructed chiefly as summer residences by wealthy clients in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries near the shores of Cazenovia Lake in central New York." It followed Cedar Cove (1884), designed by architect George Browne Post, the first "summer cottage" built on the lake. Others included Notleymere, designed by architect Robert W. Gibson; Scrooby, designed by architect Robert S. Stephenson; and Shore Acres, designed by architect Stanford White. Ormonde is part of the Cazenovia Town Multiple Resource area.