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Hyllgarth, now known as 48 Sutherland
Street, once was 61 South Main Street and was owned by Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Satterlee. When it was built,, between 1902 & 1907, it
was said to be the grandest house in Monroe County. Only Sonnenburg
in Canandaigua
, Ontario County, was equal. (The George Eastman Home and the Strong
Mansion were not yet constructed.)
The Satterlees had acquired the property in
1895 and had erected a small cabin to be used as a weekend retreat.
When Mr. Satterlee accumulated more wealth as the senior partner
in the law
firm of Satterlee, Yoeman, & Taylor, ( a pre-runner of Nixon, Hargrave,
et al,) the couple began enlarging the "cottage" to become a primary
residence. The house grew into a 40 room mansion and the outbuildings
included a carriage house, a peg barn for pigeons, a cow barn, an indoor
pool and indoor bowling, an ice house, and tennis courts. The house has
changed hands often and has been "unenlarged" by successive owners. with
several wings being removed.
The landscaping was extensive with two of
every species planted. The property contained the reported oldest and
largest copper beech tree in town. That tree is now on adjacent property
that occurred during the partitioning of the original parcel. Many of
those trees are still lining the drive that has become Stonegate Lane.
The two- room summer cottage was located amidst
large potato fields. The walls were pushed out, new walls added, and
wagon-loads of stone were trucked in for the exterior of the house and
the walls surrounding the estate. The imposing and grand South Main Street
gate and walls were constructed by village resident and stonemason, Eugene
Minnamon with help from a young Howard Little. The long wall on Sutherland
Street was built by Fred Miller and his son, George, also Pittsford residents.
It has been said that Mr. Satterlee supervised
every minute detail of the reconstruction. In that way, he was, perhaps,
a little like George Eastman when building his mansion and gardens on
East Avenue.
The home was as important to Pittsford as
the "cottages" of the rich and famous in Newport, R.I. Who else had an
upstairs and downstairs maid, a cook, a chauffeur, and gardeners? Who
else but Ellwanger and Barry had such elaborate landscaping – turning
an ordinary potato field into a veritable bower of trees, shrubs,
and flowers?
Eugene Satterlee, as stated previously, was
an attorney associated with the law firm of Satterlee, Yeoman,
and Taylor that was established in 1875. Mr. Satterlee was a graduate
of the University
of Rochester and a member of the Phi Beta Kappa fraternity. He
earned his law degree at Albany Law School and taught modern language
at Albany
Academy. He also had taught at Middlebury Academy. Perhaps this
was all before he passed the bar examination. After two years of
practice, he
joined with Mr. Yoeman to form the partnership. I don’t know exactly
who was Mr. Taylor or when he became involved in the firm.
Mr Satterlee was president of the Rochester
German Insurance Co. from 1906 to 1910. He was vice president of the
German American Bank which was a predecessor to the Lincoln Rochester
Trust Co. From 1908 to 1910 he was the president of the Lincoln National
Bank. Satterlee was one of the 1st businessmen to establish
a home in Pittsford. He remained in the law profession until his death
in 1910.
According to a former historian, Isabella
Hicks Hart, both Mr. and Mrs. Satterlee were loving and indulgent
parents to their children, Hugh and Mildred. Isabella told of wonderful
birthday
parties she attended and always there was a May pole & dance on the
lawn on May Day. She remembered it fondly and it involved many
of the youngest children in the community who would come dressed
in their very
best clothes, dance around the May pole and then gorge on wonderful,
tempting treats.
Dorothy Satterlee Wetmore inherited the property.
She may have lived in it for awhile but it was.sold to Irving Steele
in 1929. who owned it until he had financial reversals and the bank foreclosed
upon the estate, divided the property and the house and outbuildings
were acquired by Mr. and Mrs. Armon Baltzer in 1945. The Baltzers did
extensive remodeling. The servants quarters and the master wing were
removed. The carriage house was moved and remodeled into a home, which
is currently 13 Stonegate Lane and the ice-house became the garage. The
bowling alley, the pool and the tennis courts were abandoned. The property
changed hands again in 1950 when the Gaylord Whittaker family became
the owners. In 1963 the Robert Lawless family assumed ownership and I
must confess that I do not know the current owners!
Mr. Satterlee employed many people while building
his mansion. Some of those families lived in homes on West Jefferson
Road near the intersection of Sutherland Street. It has been said that
the three houses nearest the east corner of Heatherhurst were all built
about 1904-05 when Mrs. Satterlee bought the Cady farm and erected these
homes as tenant homes for her chauffeur, and gardeners.
About 1940, homes were built along what was
then the driveway of the estate. The first home was built in 1937 at
#10 as the home of Mr. and Mrs. Warren Allen. They converted a carriage
house at the beginning of Stonegate Lane as their unique and charming
home. Eventually many other homes were built and occupied along the drive
which has become Stonegate Lane. Now the history is connected to the
name Hyllgarth that is engraved on the stone entrance gates off South
Main Street.
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