Searles Castle (New Hampshire)

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LocationSearles Road, Windham, New Hampshire
Coordinates42°48′44″N 71°15′57″W / 42.81222°N 71.26583°W / 42.81222; -71.26583
Built1905–15
ArchitectHenry Vaughan
Searles Castle
Searles Castle
LocationSearles Road, Windham, New Hampshire
Coordinates42°48′44″N 71°15′57″W / 42.81222°N 71.26583°W / 42.81222; -71.26583
Built1905–15
ArchitectHenry Vaughan
Searles Castle (New Hampshire) is located in New Hampshire
Searles Castle (New Hampshire)
Location of Searles Castle in New Hampshire
Searles Castle (New Hampshire) is located in the United States
Searles Castle (New Hampshire)
Searles Castle (New Hampshire) (the United States)

The Searles Castle is located in Windham, New Hampshire, in the United States. Edward Francis Searles commissioned its design and construction. Construction began in 1905 and was completed in 1915. It was intended to be a 1/4-scale replica of the medieval Tudor manor of Stanton Harcourt in Oxfordshire, England, but since most of the manor had been torn down in the 18th century, the castle bears little resemblance to the historical structure.[1]

Searles hired architect Henry Vaughan to design Searles Castle. It is built of cut granite, fieldstone, and dark red sandstone, most of which came from Searles' own quarries in Pelham, New Hampshire. The castle is situated high atop the 175-acre (71 ha) Searles estate. The cost of construction was about $1,250,000.[2]

The castle consists of an entrance, a reception hall, a foyer, a dining room, a music room, a sun porch, a library, a grand stairway, a second floor guest suite, a third floor guest suite, a second floor rotunda (or balcony), servants' rooms, a kitchen, a butler's pantry, butlers' rooms, and a master bedroom suite which consists of a master bedroom, a sitting room, a bathroom, and a sun room.[2]

Later ownership

When Searles died on August 6, 1920, he left the castle to his executive secretary, Arthur T. Walker. When Mr. Walker died seven years later, he left the castle to his niece, Iva C. McEachern, who sold it to real estate broker Frank M. Andrew in 1930 for $2 million. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew lived in the castle from 1943 to 1952, at which time it was sold to the Religious Order of the Sisters of Mercy. For a while, they used it as a novitiate for young women who were entering the Sisters of Mercy. From 1962 to the mid-1980s, Castle Junior College held classes in the castle. Due to water damage and other problems, the castle was closed for about five years. The roof was replaced, and in 1990 the decision was made to reopen the castle.[2]

Current uses

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References

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