Tag: Historic Newport

  • Monday, April 13 – Friday, April 17 – Colonial Virginia with the Preservation Society of Newport County

    Following the success of last year’s Preservation Society member trips to the Hudson Valley and Boston, as well as a recently sold-out day trip to New York City, we’re thrilled to roll out more unforgettable travel experiences exclusively for our members in the year ahead.

    Next up: April 13-17, an exceptional journey into the heart of Colonial Virginia. This four-night adventure includes elegant accommodations at the Williamsburg Inn, a festive opening reception, private gatherings at Palmer House and Carter’s Grove, rare behind-the-scenes access to stunning James River estates such as Bacon’s Castle, Four Mile Tree, Mount Pleasant Plantation, Westover and Shirley Plantations and more!

    A few spots are still available for this one-of-a-kind experience. Once initial reservations are filled, a wait list will be maintained.

    To express your interest in this and future trips, please email our travel partners at Classical Excursions: Office@ClassicalExcursions.com.

    Tour cost: $3,995 per person (double occupancy), exclusive of airfare.

    A separate $300 per person, tax-deductible donation to The Preservation Society of Newport County is required to participate.

  • Thursday, December 18, 11:00 am – 12:00 noon – Behind the Scenes: The Breakers Holiday Decorations

    Join Jim Donahue, Curator of Historic Landscapes & Horticulture of the Preservation Society of Newport County, on Thursday, December 18 at ll am at The Breakers for a behind the scenes tour of the holiday decoration process. Preservation Society members $20, general public $25. This is an Adult Event. Two other dates, December 4 and 11, are already sold out, but you may add your name to a waiting list. To register visit https://www.newportmansions.org/events/behind-the-scenes-the-breakers-holiday-decorations-3/

  • Bio-Absorption (Rain Garden) Unveiled at Marble House

    The new bio-absorption garden – aka rain garden – next to the Marble House visitor parking lot in Newport was officially dedicated in June, though with recent rains it had already been doing its job of preventing stormwater runoff.

    A project of Scenic Aquidneck (The Preservation Society of Newport County, Aquidneck Island Land Trust, Preserve Rhode Island and the van Beuren Charitable Foundation), the garden was constructed by O’Connor Design Build in Middletown.

    This 2,800-square-foot garden will capture and filter stormwater runoff, reducing pollution and mitigating flooding. It is functional and environmentally friendly but also beautifies the space with an array of new native plantings that will promote biodiversity while attracting birds and pollinators. Preservation Society CEO Trudy Coxe noted that this new rain garden is the latest in a series of important projects completed by Scenic Aquidneck. Others include rebuilding hundreds of feet of stone wall, a project to bury power lines along Second Beach in Middletown, documenting historic barns across Aquidneck Island and pushing for historic tax credits at the state level. For more information on properties managed by The Preservation Society of Newport County, visit https://www.newportmansions.org/. Photo credit to Natasha Harrison of the Newport Tree Conservancy, far left.

  • Now through Saturday, January 25, 2025 – Wild Imagination: Art and Animals in the Gilded Age

    Americans’ relationship with animals transformed during the Gilded Age (1870-1914). With a focus on Newport history, the Preservation Society of Newport County’s exhibition at Rosecliff, 548 Bellevue Avenue in Newport, Rhode Island, explores how this exciting, tumultuous period shaped the role of animals in our modern world. In the late 19th century, Americans moved in large numbers from farms to cities, losing touch with a rural way of life and with the closeness to nature and animals that defined it. Nostalgia for a lost kinship with animals pervaded urban, industrial America. At the same time, many were encountering new, “exotic” species through a boom in foreign travel, marine exploration and imperial expansion. More everyday Americans enjoyed natural history pursuits like birdwatching. Pet keeping surged. And while captive animals thrilled spectators at zoos and circuses, which both had their heyday in the Gilded Age, activists launched the nation’s first animal rights movement.

    Newporters played a vital, though often contradictory, part in these developments. They fought at the vanguard of the animal rights movement yet set the era’s fashion for furs and feathers as residents of its most stylish summer resort. Newporters pampered their pets but expanded industries like the railroads that ravaged wildlife habitats.

    Wild Imagination brings together a menagerie of animal-themed artworks and other objects, from paintings, sculptures, photographs and fashions to fancy dog collars and sea creatures blown in glass. These pieces reflect profound and lasting changes in human-animal relations. They also reveal the individual stories of wondrous creatures that continue to capture our imagination. For hours and complete information visit https://www.newportmansions.org/events/wild-imagination/

  • Thursday, June 27, 6:00 pm – The Iconic Trees of Newport: Past, Present, & Future

    Since 2022, beech leaf disease has been a deadly threat to some of Newport’s oldest, largest, and most iconic trees. And it’s not the only challenge faced by Newport’s diverse, amazing, but aging arboretum. On June 27 at 6 pm at Rosecliff, the Preservation Society of Newport County will host a gathering of experts to discuss what needs to be done to ensure a healthy future for trees in Newport. The Iconic Trees of Newport: Past, Present, & Future will explore the city’s landscape history, the cause and treatment of beech leaf disease, and strategies for planting to preserve the citywide treescape. Speakers include Joe Verstandig, Living Collections Manager for the Newport Tree Conservancy, John R. Tschirch, Architectural Historian, Jeff Curtis, Director of Gardens and Landscapes for the Preservation Society, and Jim Donahue, Curator of Historic Landscapes and Horticulture. Also speaking will be scientists from Bartlett Tree Experts, a Partner in Preservation working to save beech trees at the Newport Mansions. To attend this free educational forum, please email Events@NewportMansions.org.

  • Friday, June 23 – Sunday, June 25 – The Newport Flower Show: The Grand Tour

    The 2023 Newport Flower Show will celebrate the early 19th-century custom of a trip as a means of gaining both exposure and association with the sophistication of Europe. The title of this year’s event is The Grand Tour.

    Guests will be enriched by surroundings steeped in cultural and social history while delighting in all the color and beauty of the floral world. The Show will take place at Marble House, Newport, R.I., from June 23-25, 2023.

    Rosecliff is undergoing several important restoration projects this summer and is not available to host the 2023 Show. We will return to Rosecliff in 2024. Flower Show and Opening Reception Tickets will be available as of April 1. Visit www.newportmansions.org