Duke Town House ca. 1979
Originally the location of a mansion built in the mid 1880s for the railroad magnate, Henry H. Cook, James Buchanan Duke replaced that hulking mansion with one of his own in 1912. Duke, a tobacco and electric power industrialist, purchased the plot at the corner of 78th Street in 1909 and considered renovating the earlier building but decided against it.
Completed in 1912 the new mansion, seen here, was designed by Philadelphia architect Horace Trumbauer. Trumbaur created for his client a near replica of the Hotel Lobottiere in Bordeaux, France. Interestingly it is believed by architectural historians that Trumbaur did not design this building solo, as had been previous suggested, but that Julian Abele, his African American lead designer, was highly involved.
Duke died in 1925 and left the home to his wife and daughter. (He also left $40 million to Trinity College in North Carolina, under the direction that it be renamed Duke University.) Doris Duke, James' daughter, would go on to make a name for herself as an art collector, historic preservationist, and pioneer of the wildlife and environmental conservation movement. (She was also the first female competitive surfer!)
In 1958 the home was donated to NYU's Institute of Fine Arts for its graduate programs and it remains in this function today. It has been been completed and sensitively restored by the University.