
The History of Glen Farm
A Landmark of Excellence
The property known today as Glen Farm
was first settled in 1638 ~ the same year that Portsmouth was
founded and only 18 years after the pilgrims landed on Plymouth
Rock!
These early settlers were Protestant dissidents from
Puritan Boston who followed Roger Williams to the newly formed
state of Rhode Island seeking greater religious tolerance.
At that time the land belonged to
a friendly tribe of Native Americans known as Narragansetts. The accessibility of
fresh water running through the glen and the proximity of
the sea made the site an attractive settlement. A ferry
was established where the glen met the shore ~ the nearest
point of crossing, providing passage to the mainland at Tiverton.
Over the course of the next generation or two, the
colonial settlers began to acquire the land
in 20-30 acre parcels from the Narragansetts and establish
permanent homes and self-sustaining farms, while six miles to
their south, Newport blossomed into a leading colonial port.
In the following century, Newport's prominence
would shift from
a leading colonial port to a summer resort for well-heeled
industrialists. One such businessman from New York named Henry A.C.
Taylor joined the ranks of the Vanderbilts and other summer
residents of Newport who sought to escape further into the
countryside and create gentleman’s farms in
the tradition of the English ‘country seat’, where horses,
livestock and produce would be raised for show, and farming would
be taken to the highest standards.
In 1882 Taylor started to buy up colonial farm parcels in
Portsmouth and assembled Glen Farm, which would became a
landmark of excellence and the pride of the community.
The glen in colonial times, with the gristmill in the
background.
The name Taylor chose was derived from the
property's most well known
feature, the glen or valley, whose fresh water stream fueled a
gristmill dating back to colonial times.
Taylor‘s gentleman’s farm became nationally reputed for
its blue-ribbon Clydesdale and Percheron horses, Jersey, Guernsey &
Alderney cattle, fostered by state-of-the-art farming practices
and innovating improvements in breeding and dairy
production. The
classic stone and wood farm buildings were designed by the
leading architects of the era, and Taylor’s summer residence ~ a magnificent French chateau
Manor House was designed by Alexander Pope and landscaped by
Frederick Law Olmstead, in replica of the Petit Trianon at Versailles
~ while additional housing on the estate provided for employees, including the
Leonard Brown House, the Gatehouse and the Gardeners House, all of
which stand to this day as a testament to their superior
construction & design.
In all, its total acreage boasted in excess of 700 acres.
The farm was, by all measure, a self
sustaining farm turning out its own produce, water supply,
electricity from a generator supplied by the mill in the glen,
providing its own fire engine and telephone system.
Taylor commissioned the classic stone and wood frame barns &
stable complex at the turn of the century with leading architects at the
height of the Gilded Age. There was also a wagon shed, tool house,
blacksmith shop, ice house, pottery shed, animal hospital and pump
house. At its peak,
it provided all the necessities for nearly fifty families that
lived and worked on the property.
After his death, Glen Farm
passed from Henry A.C. Taylor to his son Moses Taylor in 1921,
then to
Moses’ widow Edith Bishop in 1928, who later remarried.
As Mrs. Guthrie Nicholson, she began selling off certain
portions of the farm until her death in 1959.
Her will, executed by her son Reginald Taylor, allowed for
much of the farm’s assets to be sold, including some of its
residences to the employees. The Manor House was narrowly saved from destruction by a
referendum of town voters. Finally,
in 1982 the last of the Taylor lineage, Reginald’s grandson
Mason Phelps, acquired a controlling interest in the barn complex
and surrounding 86 acres in the heart of Glen Farm two years before his
Reginald’s death, when all of the remaining acreage would be put up for sale.
Phelps ran the International Jumping Derby for several
years at the farm before retiring to Florida.
During those years, Glen Farm was poorly maintained and eventually
abandoned.
In 1989, Phelps’ trust offered Glen Farm to the Town of
Portsmouth for a mere $3.6 million.
Just when it approached demise,
Glen Farm’s rebirth began.
In 1990, a 25-year old Boston renovator named
Dan Keating signed a ten-year lease with the Town to rehabilitate
Glen Farm and reincarnate the international polo tradition in its
American birthplace ~ a tall order, given the condition of the
farm after years of neglect and abandonment. The
condition of the farm was
such that not a pane of glass
remained in place nor a door on its hinges.
The severely derelict property needed entirely new
mechanical systems
including plumbing, electrical, heating and fire alarm systems.
In addition, Keating made wholesale repairs to the barns
themselves, while improving the grounds with the addition of the polo
field, soil and water conservation projects and the paddock
system. In the renovation
process, Keating's attention
to detail included solid brass hardware recast to match original
pieces throughout the barns & stables. Over the course of his lease, Keating personally invested
over $600,000 on top of regular maintenance expenses and rent, into reviving
the farm into a thriving equestrian operation.
Under the direction of the Portsmouth Town
Council, the stewardship of Glen Farm has changed hands a few
more times since Keating's tenure, but the equestrian center he
established carries on, and the Newport Polo Club
(predecessor to America's first polo club ~ the Westchester Polo Club)
and the Newport International Polo Series, which he
founded on the premises, continue to make their
home on the polo grounds of Glen Farm with a current lease in
effect through their Silver Anniversaries,
all the while attracting thousands of spectators and residents from surrounding
communities to enjoy the summer pastime, and contributing in
excess of $200,000 to charitable causes.
Photo by Roto-photo.com