82,
I've often enjoyed reading Kunstler's rants, but this one is a bit too colored with inaccurate details, though I'm sure they are unintentionally. After all, he was a young boy who only lived in Roslyn for less than two years.
My family was one of the first families to have settled on Long Island in the 1640s and on the North Shore at the head of Hempstead Harbor they founded Roslyn, though that was not what it was called back then. They owned an immense amount of land that spanned the island from its south shore to its north shore and included most of what is now Nassau County some of Queens and a portion of Suffolk County.
I know Roslyn as well as anyone does. I lived there in the early '70s before moving upstate in 1974. I still have relatives living on Long Island, but after 350 years, I was the last of my line to line to live in Roslyn. I sold my family's home to the Roslyn Preservation Society in 1999 when it became apparent that neither of my children were going to move back to the island. I could no longer find any comfort on Long Island, though it does have the best surf on the east coast, so I contacted someone I knew who would be interested in buying my home and sold it to the Society with the understanding that it would be opened for public tours twice a year. My home was a simple home, not a mansion by any stretch of the imagination.
Roslyn is 17 miles from Manhattan. If you read Fitzgerald's
The Great Gatsby or saw the movie you will understand why this area was called the Gold Coast. If you haven't, it was called this because of the profusion of gigantic estates with mansions that would rival those of European royalty, but these were owned by Robber Barons and other rich industrialists.
Harbor Hill, Mackay's (correctly pronounced Mack-E) estate house, was designed by
Stanford White, (one of my favorite architects, though an abhorrent individual) and was built in 1902 on 688 acres of land on the highest hill in Nassau County at a cost of nearly $800K. (about $16m today) And that cost didn't include art, furnishings, outbuildings landscaping, or the architect's commission.
The house was torn down (dynamited) in 1947, seven years before Kunstler moved from NYC to LI. So, if he was wandering around the estate when he was a kid, Kunstler wasn't seeing the Mackay Mansion, but rather was playing about a guest cottage or some other out-building, as all great estates had aside from the main house several out-buildings, and guest houses so large that most of us would consider them mansions. Just take a look at his
carriage house and I think you'll see what I mean. (2nd pic down)
(A bit of RI trivia: White's last project was building Tesla's
Wardenclyffe Tower.
My property bordered the estate of
Childs Frick, son of Henry Clay Frick, who bought the property for his son as a wedding present from poet William Cullen Bryant, which had been a portion of
Cedarmere. My house and Frick's are located on the hill to the north of Harbor Hill, directly under "Wheatley" on this
map from 1897. The Frick estate is now the Nassau County Fine Arts Museum.
Kunstler's childhood home, which was built on land that was once part of Mackay's estate, at $24K in 1954 was a very expensive home in a very exclusive North Shore neighborhood. Levitt houses (the 1st Levittown) were then selling for between $4600 to $7400. My father was a builder and the home he built for us on the south shore was priced at $18k in 1954. Today my childhood home would sell in excess of $1.5m. Kunstlers would bring at least $2.5m.
Today Kunstler lives in Saratoga Springs, a summer retreat for many of the worlds wealthy, but usually they're in town only in August, to buy or sell horses at the Fasig-Tipton yearling auction and to race their horses at the track that is host to America's oldest stakes race, The Travers.
Long Island has been over-built and an unsustainable population bears being poisoned by pollution from NYC's coal-fired power plants, the island's waste incinerators emissions and automobile exhaust. The smog is often as bad as LA's and if you ever travel to the top of the Empire State Building, be sure to go on a windy day, because if you go on a perfectly calm and clear day and look out to the east over the length of Long Island all you will be able to see is a soot filled sickly yellow sky.
If you ever have a chance to visit Roslyn be sure to visit the park everyone calls the Roslyn duckpond. It is really a very beautiful park with spring fed ponds, and home to New York's first paper mill with an operating water wheel. Main Street has an abundance of 18th and 19 century homes, more than any other town on Long Island.
All in all, Roslyn is a lovely village with a rich history, but you've got to be rich if you plan on living there.
We all must do whatever we can to help restore the damage we all have done to the Earth. There are things that can be done, though most of us may not see the results of our good work. We must respect what sustains us as much that which gives us life.
I will write more on what we can do, what we must do, within the next 4 or 5 days. Crazy busy trying to guide policy towards a sustainable future...