Hank was initially not interested in touring an ostentatious display of the excesses of America’s Gilded Age, but after viewing a short video at the visitor center and talking with some of the staff there, he was won over. George Vanderbilt’s grandfather was a self-made man who started a ferry business with a modest $100 investment. He grew that business into a shipping and railroad empire. George inherited about $5 million and grew his wealth to more than $50 million by the time of his death in 1914.
The house and grounds are amazing tributes to architecture, but George was quite a collector of art and he hired the sculptor Karl Bitter to create new works for the home, including “Boy Stealing Geese”, the bronze centerpiece in the atrium. The house if filled with paintings, etchings and tapestry. Here is a link where you can see much of the art.
We capped off the day with dinner at a sidewalk Cajun restaurant downtown.


