Coindre Hall
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Coindre Hall, originally called West Neck Farm, is a 40-room, mansion in the style of a medieval French château completed in 1912 for pharmaceutical magnate George McKesson Brown. Coindre Hall sits on of rolling land overlooking Huntington Harbor, near the Long Island Sound.


History


George McKesson Brown

The house was designed by New York architect Clarence Sumner Luce and completed in 1912 for George McKesson Brown of the McKesson pharmaceutical family. Brown, a Huntington Fire Commissioner for 29 years before his retirement in 1960, was the elder half-brother of race car driver David Bruce-Brown. In 1930, Brown donated a private road to the Town of Huntington, named Browns Road in his honor. Brown sold the house in 1939. (He died at Huntington on October 3, 1964, age 86 years.)


Brothers of the Sacred Heart

In 1939, at the request of Bishop Monsignor Thomas Molly, the
Brothers of the Sacred Heart The Brothers of the Sacred Heart ( la, Fratres a Sacratissimo Corde Iesu) is a Catholic lay religious congregation of Pontifical Right for Men founded by the Reverend Fr. André Coindre (1787–1826) in 1821. Its Constitution was modeled upon that ...
(active in Christian education since 1847) bought the property, intending to establish a boarding school and summer retreat. It was founded by Brother Martinian, S.C., Provincial Superior and named in memory of Father
André Coindre André Coindre (26 February 1787 – 30 May 1826), a French Roman Catholic priest, founded the Brothers of the Sacred Heart. Life Coindre was born in Lyon, France in 1787. He attended the École Centrale de Lyon and then the minor seminary. ...
, the founder of the order. The school was intended to generate funds for the formation and education of young members of the order. It closed on June 30, 1971, due to a lack of teachers. At the time of its closing there were 116 students.


Suffolk County Ownership

The Suffolk County Legislature voted to purchase Coindre Hall for $750,000 in July 1972 and spent $4,000 to map the area. The plan was to use it as a harborfront park and lease the manor to the Town of Huntington to be used as a cultural center. At the end of 1976, Suffolk County decided to close Coindre Hall due to budget cutbacks. It was costing the county about $90,000 to keep it open. Since the county's purchase of the property it had been used by the Huntington Militia, the Suffolk County Highway Patrol Bureau and the Huntington Art League. The property was leased from Suffolk County in 1981 by Eagle Hill School, a private coeducational boarding school for students with learning disabilities. The school signed a 25year lease but run into financial difficulties and broke the lease in 1989. The school had declining enrollment and could not afford the rent or make needed repairs to the building.


Today

Since 1973, Coindre Hall Park has been administered by the Suffolk County Department of Parks, Recreation & Conservation. Currently there is a gym that hosts soccer and basketball, and ww.splashesofhope.org Splashes of Hopehas art studio space upstairs through a work-exchange program with the county. The mansion is often used for hosting weddings and unique catered events exclusively through Lessings Caterers. The Town of Huntington Department of Parks & Recreation used Coindre Hall for its adult exercise classes in Fall 2018. On September 26, 1985, it was listed on the
National Register of Historic Places The National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) is the United States federal government's official list of districts, sites, buildings, structures and objects deemed worthy of preservation for their historical significance or "great artistic ...
Suffolk County Listings on the National Register of Historic Places
/ref> and dedicated to the Suffolk County Historic Trust.


References


External links


Coindre Hall Topographic MapCoindre Hall Aerial PhotoCoindre Hall, Suffolk County ParksCoindre Hall Alumni Facebook PageBrothers of the Sacred HeartBrothers of the Sacred Heart Foundation
{{Gold Coast mansions Boarding schools in New York (state) Defunct schools in New York (state) Educational institutions established in 1939 Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in New York (state) Mansions of Gold Coast, Long Island Huntington, New York Houses in Suffolk County, New York 1939 establishments in New York (state) Châteauesque architecture in the United States National Register of Historic Places in Suffolk County, New York