Street Address:
3300 London Road
Duluth, MN 55804
Directions:
Just north of downtown Duluth
Phone Number:
888 454-4536
Fax Number:
218 726-8911
Website:
www.d.umn.edu/glen
2nd Website:
www.visitduluth.com
Run by:
The University of Minnesota
Date Established:
1908
Size:
22 acres, 7 acres on the North Shore of Lake Superior
Designer:
Charles W. Leavitt, Jr. from New York City
Cost:
Grounds - No admission fee
1-1/4 hr. tours of mansion - Fee (recommended)
Peak Season:
Summer to fall
Extras:
Free parking at entrance
Restrooms
Gardens - limited accessibity (Mansion- accessible)
Food - Tea room in lower level of mansion
Weddings can be scheduled in the gardens
Comments:
Glensheen is a well preserved 22 acre estate, listed on the National Registry of Historic Places. It encompassess the 39 room, Jacobean mansion with its original furnishings surrounded by outbuildings including carriage houses and the original, charming gardener's cottage. The Condon family who built the estate from 1905 to 1908 and who lived in there through the 1960's had made their fortune in lumber. Defying the convention of the times (which was the wealthy lived up on the hillside bluffs of Duluth) the house was built on the lakeshore. A landscape architect from New York City, Charles W. Leavitt, was hired to ensure the siting of the house disturbed the wooded land as little as possible. Extensive formal gardens in descending levels from the house to the lake were executed based on English landscape gardening concepts of the time. Planting beds were placed around a framework of walls, hedges and paved walkways. This formal central swath was flanked by wilder, wooded areas on either side of the mansion. Paths meander through these woods and a picturesque stone footbridge spans a tributary stream that runs into the lake. In their heyday, the gardens were much more elaborate than today and the grounds contained four large greenhouses, torn down in 1971. These were formerly located behind the gardener's cottage and generated the 6,000 or so annuals planted each year. Still visible are remnants of the utility gardens that formerly grew most of the foodstuffs for the Condon family. Some of these gardens are now used to do vegetable trials and mulch studies by the University of Minnesota in Duluth. |