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Published byLee Hensley Modified over 9 years ago
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4 th grade Lakeshore Elementary
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It is located in Asheville, NC. The style of architecture is chateau. A chateau is a French style of house. It is sort of like a castle. The Biltmore was only Mr. Vanderbilt’s summer home. It was designed to be a self sustaining residence. This means that the family didn’t need to leave the grounds for food, water, etc.
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These slides will introduce you to some of the background information about the Biltmore…
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Vanderbilt was born to a poor family and quit school at the age of 11 to work for his father who was engaged in boating. When he turned 16 he persuaded his mother to give him $100 loan for a boat to start his first business. He opened a transport and freight service between New York City and Staten Island for eighteen cents a trip. At the time of his death, aged 82, Cornelius Vanderbilt's fortune was estimated at $100 million. In his will, he left 95% of his $100 million estate to his son William and to William's four sons $5,000,000 to Cornelius Vanderbilt II, and $2 million apiece to William Kissam Vanderbilt, Frederick Vanderbilt, and George Washington Vanderbilt,III. Mr. Vanderbilt had 12 other children.
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George W. Vanderbilt, youngest son of William Vanderbilt and grandson of "Commodore" Cornelius Vanderbilt, enjoyed visiting western North Carolina for its mild climate and spectacular scenery. Born in 1862, young Vanderbilt was educated at local private schools and at home by tutors. He proved to be an able student with an active, inquiring mind and began to read widely at a very tender age. Around the age of twelve, he began recording each book he read in a series of small notebooks. George loved to travel. He made many trips to Europe. He loved architecture. During a visit in the mid-1880s, Vanderbilt was inspired by a view from Downtown Asheville so spectacular that he purchased 125,000 acres in the Blue Ridge Mountains for his summer estate.
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The area was still so remote that Vanderbilt had to build a private railway to the site to transport supplies. He also constructed a village complete with a post office and a church to accommodate the laborers and their families. Selecting a name for his estate, Vanderbilt referenced his family — and the mountains of Western North Carolina. The name “Biltmore” is derived from “Bildt,” a Dutch town with citizens of Vanderbilt ancestry, and “more,” an old English term referring to rolling, mountainous countryside.
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Construction of Biltmore House was under way in 1889; it was a massive undertaking that included a mansion, gardens, farms, and woodlands. George Vanderbilt engaged two of the most distinguished designers of the 19th century: architect Richard Morris Hunt (1828-1895) and landscape designer Frederick Law Olmsted (1822-1903) An architect is a person that designs buildings. Hunt modeled the architecture on the richly ornamented style of the French Renaissance and adapted elements, such as the stair tower and the steeply pitched roof, from three famous early-16th-century châteaux. A chateau is sort of like a French castle.
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The main gate… This is what it looks like when you come to the main entrance of the Biltmore Estate.
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The family grew plants indoors during the winter months.
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The Library in Biltmore House holds approximately 10,000 of Vanderbilt's more than 23,000 volumes.
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The Banquet Hall is 72 feet long, 42 feet wide and 70 feet high. It could seat up to 64 guests.
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Most of the cooking was done in the Main Kitchen with additional work done in the Rotisserie and Pastry Kitchens.
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George Vanderbilt's bedroom enjoys spectacular views of the estate in addition to 22k gold leaf on the walls.
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Mrs. Vanderbilt's Bedroom is decorated with sumptuous cut velvet and silk fabrics.
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The room is adorned with velvet and carvings on the ceiling and walls.
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Biltmore does not receive any governmental funding or grants, making it one of the United States' most significant National Historic Landmarks that is preserved solely through private funding.
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http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://w ww.iss.k12.nc.us/schools/scavenger/biltmore/co nstruction_01.jpg&imgrefurl=http://www.iss.k12. nc.us/schools/scavenger/biltmore/biltmore.htm &usg=__hmq_fC-JDsaoI54ibkFKtyxq1- w=&h=123&w=236&sz=10&hl=en&start=1&um= 1&itbs=1&tbnid=waPM76Qk1W99BM:&tbnh=57 &tbnw=109&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dbiltmore% 2Bestate%2Bconstruction%26um%3D1%26hl%3 Den%26client%3Dfirefox- a%26sa%3DX%26rls%3Dorg.mozilla:en- US:official%26tbs%3Disch:1
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