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Operating Schedule
January 3 - March 16, 2012
The Breakers
Open Daily
The Elms & Marble House
Open weekends, holidays, and daily February 17-26 for Newport Winter Festival

See The Elms on PBS's This Old House, February 18. 

History Highlights

On these pages, you'll get a glimpse into some of the exhibits, research and collections of The Preservation Society of Newport County, compiled by our curators and academic researchers.

Saving Bellevue Avenue:  Preserving Our Historic Gates, Fences and Walls

The gates, fences and walls of Bellevue Avenue, dating from the mid-19th to the early 20th centuries, represent the work of a number of prominent American architects. These enclosures made of brick, stone, wood and iron reflect a variety of construction methods, materials and historic revival styles. When taken as a whole, all of these gates, walls and fences serve as a character-defining framework for Bellevue Avenue; they are the first elements an individual sees and encounters.

However, the very gates, walls and fences that define this legendary street are not appropriately protected under the Saving-bellevue-ave.jpgpresent Historic District Ordinance. Newport?s residents must remain vigilant in order to preserve the beauty and historic significance of one of the city's most important streets.

Click on the image at left to learn more about the historic importance of Bellevue Avenue's gates, walls and fences and their critical role in defining the character of this famed street.   You must have Adobe Acrobat Reader installed to download this pdf document. 





Servants in Newport

In 1999, The Preservation Society of Newport County initiated an oral history project, ?Keeping House.?  It began as a community effort appealing to locals who knew of individuals that worked at the Newport mansions.  Information and leads came forth from people who were domestics at the mansions and relatives of former domestics.  Documenting their stories opened a fascinating personal perspective on behind the scenes life in Newport?s great houses of the Gilded Age and encapsulated a unique social and cultural group in Newport. 

Following are several brief profiles of servants who worked in Newport?s houses, some of whose stories can be heard in the new audio tour of The Breakers.  We thank everyone who shared their stories and photographs for this important research project.

Read the Domestic Profiles

The Meservey Photographic Survey




In the late 1940s the Preservation Society of Newport County commissioned Robert Meservey to capture images of Newport's Colonial to Edwardian architectural heritage.  These photographs were to accompany the ground breaking study by Antoinette Downing and Vincent Scully, The Architectural Heritage of Newport Rhode Island:  1640 - 1915.  Many of these photographs were not included in the 1952 publication. 


See the Meservey photos


The Lost Houses of Newport





This collection of photographs highlights the perils facing Newport's architectural heritage in the years between 1945 and 1973, when more than 30 estates of national historical significance vanished in favor of residential and commercial subdivision. 

Learn more about the Lost Houses of Newport





Portrait of a Newport Lady:  The Fashionable Woman in 1900

The Story of Gwendolen King Armstrong of Kingscote

What's a traditional Victorian mother to do when her precocious little girl grows into a young woman with modern ideas?  Find out in this engaging exploration of the relationship between Gwendolen King Armstrong and her mother in an exhibition of fashions, accessories and letters.

Learn more about the Portrait of a Newport Lady