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Chateau-sur-Mer is a landmark of High Victorian architecture, furniture, wallpapers, ceramics and stenciling. It was the most palatial residence in Newport from its completion in 1852 until the appearance of the Vanderbilt houses in the 1890s. Chateau-sur-Mer was the scene of memorable entertainment, from the "Fete Champetre", an elaborate country picnic for over two thousand guests held in 1857, to the debutante ball for Miss Edith Wetmore in 1889. Chateau-su-Mer's grand scale and lavish parties ushered in the Gilded Age of Newport.
Chateau-sur-Mer was built as an
Italianate-style villa for China trade merchant William Shepard Wetmore.
Mr. Wetmore died in 1862, leaving the bulk of his fortune to his son,
George Peabody Wetmore, and a generous allowance for his daughter, Annie
Derby Wetmore. George married Edith Keteltas in 1869.
During the 1870s, the young couple departed
on an extended trip to Europe, leaving architect Richard Morris Hunt to
remodel and redecorate the house in the Second Empire French style. As a
result, Chateau-sur-Mer displays most of the major design trends of the
last half of the 19th century. George Peabody Wetmore had a distinguished
political career as Governor of Rhode Island and as a United States
Senator. He died in 1921 and his wife in 1927. They were survived by their
two daughters, Edith and Maude, who never married. The house was purchased
by the Preservation Society in 1969.
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