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Historic Photo from NRHP Filing
NPS Number: August 21, 1972 Title: David Whitney House Loc.: Wayne County, Michigan Front of building faces NE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR NATIONAL PARK SERVICE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES PROPERTY PHOTOGRAPH FORM (Type all entries - attach to or enclose with photograph) NAME COMMON: David Whitney House AND/OR HISTORIC: David Whitney House LOCATION STREET AND NUMBER: 4421 Woodward Avenue CITY OR TOWN: Detroit STATE: Michigan COUNTY: Wayne PHOTO REFERENCE PHOTO CREDIT: Division of Michigan History, Department of State DATE OF PHOTO: 1971 NEGATIVE FILED AT: Division of Michigan History, Department of State, Lansing IDENTIFICATION DESCRIBE VIEW, DIRECTION, ETC. Front of building faces northeast.
The residence of David Whitney, Jr., on Woodward Avenue was once described by the Detroit Free Press as 'an American palace enjoying the distinction of being the most pretentious modern home in the state and one of the most elaborate houses in the west.' David Whitney, Jr., descended from a line of colonial ancestors who settled in Watertown, Mass., in 1635, came to Detroit in 1857 and assumed charge of the western business of two firms involved in the buying and shipping of lumber and purchasing of pine lands and logs. For some time these firms ranked with the largest dealers of the country and Whitney had charge of their operations in Michigan, Ohio, and Pennsylvania. These firms dissolved in the 1870s and thereafter Whitney dealt with investing in pine lands principally in Wisconsin and Michigan. In time he became one of the most extensive lumber operators in the midwest and ranked with Michigan's millionaires. He was also involved with lake-marine transportation, owning an extensive fleet of steam barges and consorts involved not only in the lumber trade but in the shipment of iron ore from Lake Superior ports to manufacturing and distributing centers on the lower lakes. He owned large amounts of land in Detroit, was a stockholder and director in many banking institutions and industrial corporations, and owned manufacturing plants connected with the lumber industry. He was also a generous donor to charities, complying with his wife's desire to have a more modern residence, Whitney commissioned Gordon W. Lloyd to erect a domicile in the new Romanesque style. Begun in 1890, the house took four years to build. Whitney supposedly spent $400,000 on the house itself, $250,000 on decorations and glazing, and $300,000 on art treasures. The luxurious interior, reminiscent of residences of Napoleonic Paris, included such items as a painted silk covered ceiling, silks and tapestries on walls, custom made furniture, and windows by Tiffany's.
The house, located on the northwest corner of Woodward and Canfield avenues, was constructed of jasper brought from South Dakota. The pillars are of polished jasper, Romanesque Revival in style, it rises three stories having 42 rooms, 10 bathrooms, 20 fireplaces, each of a different marble or onyx, 218 windows of stained and leaded glass, installed by Tiffany's of New York and a four-floor elevator. The grand hall is the largest room in the house, measuring 24 feet by 50 feet. The massive mantel in this room is partially made of Pompeiian brick with a bronze clock set in. From this room it is possible to view the grand staircase with its bronze balustrade and newels. A magnificent Tiffany stained glass window illuminates the landing. The library was described as being 'peculiar in shape' having many angles. The mantel, extending from the floor to the ceiling, is composed of massive mahogany columns with carved capitals supporting a broad shelf. Other interior features include hand-carved woodwork, parquet floors, and carved pillars. The only major structural change has been the rebuilding of the solarium. Drop lights were hung in the music room. The furnishings are not original, but are representative of the period. The edifice is in excellent condition.
Gordon W. Lloyd
NRHP Ref# 72000671 • Data from National Park Service • Content available under CC BY-SA 4.0
NPS Number: August 21, 1972 Title: David Whitney House Loc.: Wayne County, Michigan Front of building faces NE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR NATIONAL PARK SERVICE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES PROPERTY PHOTOGRAPH FORM (Type all entries - attach to or enclose with photograph) NAME COMMON: David Whitney House AND/OR HISTORIC: David Whitney House LOCATION STREET AND NUMBER: 4421 Woodward Avenue CITY OR TOWN: Detroit STATE: Michigan COUNTY: Wayne PHOTO REFERENCE PHOTO CREDIT: Division of Michigan History, Department of State DATE OF PHOTO: 1971 NEGATIVE FILED AT: Division of Michigan History, Department of State, Lansing IDENTIFICATION DESCRIBE VIEW, DIRECTION, ETC. Front of building faces northeast.
Public Domain (Michigan Filing)
The David Whitney House is a Romanesque Revival mansion at 4421 Woodward Avenue in Midtown Detroit, Michigan. Completed in 1894 to the designs of architect Gordon W. Lloyd for lumber entrepreneur David Whitney Jr., it features rose-pink jasper stone cladding and numerous art-glass windows. The property is a contributing resource in Detroit’s Cultural Center Historic District and was individually listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972. Since 1986, the building has housed a restaurant.The Whitney House, c. 1905 The house was built between 1890 and 1894 by a prominent lumber baron, David Whitney Jr., who was considered not only one of Detroit's wealthiest personalities, but also one of Michigan's wealthiest citizens. The house is estimated to have cost US$400,000 at the time, and it was featured in several contemporaneous newspapers.The exterior is constructed using pink jasper from South Dakota. It is measured to be 21,000 square feet (2,000 m2) and has 52 rooms (including 10 bathrooms), 218 windows, 20 fireplaces, a secret vault in the dining room, an elevator, and numerous Tiffany glass windows.The Tiffany glass windows have been estimated to be worth more than the house itself. The window designs often feature themes oriented around the purpose of the rooms they are located in. For example, the music room's windows are themed towards elements of music as well as images of Saint Cecilia, the patron saint of music. A prominent stained-glass window depicting a medieval knight overlooks the main staircase. Architectural historians note that the window reflects the romantic historicism popular in Gilded Age interiors, rather than any verified family heraldry.Designed by Gordon W. Lloyd in the Romanesque Revival mode, the house is clad in rose-pink jasper stone from South Dakota and arranged around formal reception rooms, including a music room and a conservatory off the dining room. The Canfield Ave. elevation combines gables, bays, and dormers, while a large carriage house (reportedly the state’s largest when built) served the property. The original coach house incorporated a lift to bring carriages to an upper level.David Whitney Jr., c. 1891 David Whitney Jr. was born in 1830 in Watertown, Massachusetts. Whitney made his millions in Massachusetts as a lumber baron. He moved to Detroit from Lowell (where he had established himself as a lumber baron) in 1857, at the young age of twenty-seven. Starting a joint venture with his brother Charles, he continued to expand his vastly successful lumber business into Ohio, Indiana, and Pennsylvania.Whitney was always fascinated by the Detroit Athletic Club (DAC). Part of the DAC's grounds is now under the possession of Wayne State University. Included among the elite members of the original DAC were Whitney and his son David C. Whitney. This influenced his choice for the location of the Whitney House, as it overlooked the grounds of the DAC. The Whitney mansion was built between 1890 and 1894, and estimated to have cost approximately $400,000. After Whitney's death in 1900, his family continued to reside in the mansion until 1920. It was converted into an upscale restaurant in 1986.In 1957, the Visiting nurse association purchased the house for $150,000. In 1979, the house was sold to Detroit-based real estate magnate Richard Kughn, who in 2007 sold it to former Chrysler executive, Arthur “Bud” Liebler, for more than $2 million.Following the Whitney family’s occupancy into the 1920s, the house became headquarters of the Wayne County Medical Society; the Visiting Nurse Association purchased the property in 1957, aided by the Metropolitan Detroit Building Fund and the McGregor Fund, for $150,000. In 1979, Detroit businessman Richard Kughn acquired the mansion and undertook a major rehabilitation. The building opened as a restaurant in 1986. In 2007, ownership transferred to Arthur “Bud” Liebler.The David Whitney House in December 2021 Since its 1980s restoration, the house has occasionally been described in Detroit popular media as "haunted," primarily because of its age and ornate interior. Local features such as WDIV-TV’s "Haunted Detroit" series and The Detroit News have mentioned the Whitney in lists of reportedly haunted buildings, though no verifiable evidence supports these claims.• Whitney House interior, 2011••••• Cultural Center Historic District (Detroit)• Hill, Eric J., and John Gallagher (2002). AIA Detroit: The American Institute of Architects Guide to Detroit Architecture. Wayne State University Press. ISBN 0-8143-3120-3.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)Wikimedia Commons has media related to David Whitney House.• The Whitney Restaurant• Historic Detroit – David Whitney HouseHospitals • Detroit Medical Center Children's Hospital of Michigan• Detroit Receiving Hospital• Harper University Hospital• Hutzel Women's HospitalMuseums • Detroit Historical Museum• Detroit Institute of Arts• Michigan Science Center• Charles H. Wright Museum of African American HistoryClubs • Detroit Masonic Temple• Scarab ClubResidencesReligion • Cass Avenue Methodist Episcopal Church• Cathedral Church of St. Paul• Chapel of St. Theresa-the Little Flower• First Congregational Church• First Presbyterian Church• First Unitarian Church of Detroit• Saint Andrew's Memorial Episcopal Church• Temple Beth-ElUtility buildings • Willis Avenue StationCommercial buildings • Architects Building• Cass Motor Sales• Detroit-Columbia Central Office Building• Graybar Electric Company Building• Russell Industrial CenterPublic facilities • Dunbar Hospital• Majestic Theater• Garden Bowl• Orchestra Hall• Little Caesars ArenaThis list is incomplete.
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