Lake-of-the-Isles Parkway in Minneapolis is lined with beautiful old mansions, each one outdoing the next. This house may have been the crown jewel. What a shame it didn't survive.
Thank you Ken. I live in Minneapolis and have walked around Lake of the Isles many times. There are still many beautiful mansions that still stand around the lake.
A great house and with so much potential to be well-used even if not as a family home, torn down after standing for so few years and being occupied for even fewer years. Of the houses featured in "This House", I think the story of the Gates mansion is the worst waste of a house I've seen.
Living near the area all of my life the “Lakes” were a big part of my childhood, swimming, bicycling and walking. This house is one of many extremely memorable places that surrounded the area of Cedar, LOTI, Harriet, Theodore Wirth, Brownie, etc. Sadly, many hardworking folks didn’t hand the work ethics they had over to their children and this was the result.
Historic buildings in Minnesota are usually deemed garbage and are destroyed. Duluth tore down an old hotel building that was connected to John Jacob Astor.
@@brendamartini2165It's because rich people from other places are looking at MN as their new playground. Those people don't give a damn about anything but money and feeding their own ego.
I'm getting demolition burnout watching This House. I understand this is an historical survey, but it would be a great relief to have a happy ending thrown in once in a while. Maybe start with a house museum and work our way back.
Such a gorgeous home! All that marble! Again, such a shame it couldn't have survived to be enjoyed by this and future generations. I hope they were able to repurpose lots of that marble. And what about the grand fireplace carved from one piece of marble!? I hope it was saved by someone.
Absolutely an utterly beautiful and astounding house... such a shame no one could figure out a way to reuse it...much more grander and beautiful than what replaced it... thank you again for a nice visit
What an enjoyable video. I pause at every floorplan presented. Thank you for including these for those of us who really like examining such details as layouts and house design. From the beginning of the video I was wondering how much it would cost to heat such a behemoth in those brutal Minnesota winters. Apparently quite a bit.
I got to work in a couple of the mansions on Summit Ave in St Paul with my dad's company back in the '80s and learned of the practice of shutting down and sealing off much of the house during the coldest and hottest months, specifically to save on the astronomical utility bills.
Such a beautiful house, Ken. It seems so many owners of these homes never live in them , or, live only a short time in them. Have you noticed that many of the children of tycoons squander their inheritance? What a shame! Love your videos!
Curse of Turtle Island. The majority of the rich here aren't supposed to be here and are subject to a curse published centuries ago as punishment for the rebellious colonization that resulted in the likes of wasteful construction such as the subject of this video.
Curse of Turtle Island. The majority of the rich here aren't supposed to be here and are subject to a curse published centuries ago as punishment for the rebellious colonization that resulted in the likes of wasteful construction such as the subject of this video.
The beautiful Mediterranean style house pictured right next to it at 1:34 is still standing and it looks absolutely beautiful! One of my favorites on a walk around Lake Of The Isles, my old neighborhood. The South Minneapolis "Chain Of Lakes" area is loaded with beautiful old 19th and early 20th century homes.
Recall that my grandmother used her inheritance to also buy a house in Minneapolis around 1905 for the grand sum of $2,000 on Fremont Ave. North near St. Olafs.
This house is stunning. But so many of these magnificent houses suffered the same fate. How thoughtful it would have been if the people who built them put as much into the future upkeep as they did trying to show off their wealth.
Well, when you asked what became of this house, I knew it must no longer exist. I just can’t believe these houses that were built for the ages were demolished in so short a time.
A Beautiful home but such a short life span . This really was a grand estate . It breaks my heart to see lovely homes as grand as these are be left to disrepair and then be demolished.
I drove by this lot every day for 10 years. Had no idea about the history. The house that sits on the lot now was only built recently. There was a large 'modern' 1970s or maybe 1980s home there when I lived in the neighborhood.
An obscenity of riches. No single family would ever need to live in a house that size. I wonder what a 37 yr old man could die, in his sleep, from? Was it ever determined?
Only 19 years in existence wow. The replacement home sold for 7.3 million in 2021 , a staggering sum for Minneapolis, a rather small somewhat forgotten metro area in the USA.
Have you been to Mpls? The population of Mpls is approx. 400k. The population of the Twin Cities metro is approx 3 million. Not small by any standard. Home to Target Corp., United Healthcare, 3M and General Mills, etc. Also, home of the largest privately held company in the United States, Cargill. Nothing forgotten about Mpls.
Quick everybody lets buy plane tickets to Minneapolis for sightseeing, said no one ever. Minnesotans are twisted too tight, it was said in jest. I was merely setting the stage for the price of the replacement home, which even if at 10 million would mean nothing in DC, San Fran, New York, LA....
@@pavelow235 The median price of housing in DC is $615K. The median price of housing in San Francisco is $1,216,087. The median price of housing in NYC is $979k. The median price of housing in LA is $972K. As I used to tell my staff when I lived and worked in Mpls: “Manage by facts”. You may want to give that a try.
We have several museums based out of the former homes of wealthy residents in the Twin Cities. The James J Hill house and the American Swedish Institute spring to mind.
Love your vids Ken this was unreal ,A air-conditioning (that was such a grand marvel at that time ) that ball room (fans myself) so sad , the poor house did not want to come down either ❤
The fireplace is exactly what I was thinking about too. It’s beyond a shame that magnificent buildings like this weren’t preserved with public funds or other means. It would have brought a great deal of money to the city from visitors. We no longer have the craftsmen to construct anything of this quality. 😢
*_Fifty-Thousand Square Feet?!_** (it was the Gilded Age version of "The One" in Bel Air)! A 0.40 acres chunk of its original lot sold in 2021 for $2 million.* *(John Gates was legendary Wall Street speculator nicknamed, "Bet-A-Million Gates." His story easily merits its own turn on the History Channel)*
What loss. Wish it still stood. What a grand home and would be awesome even today. Wish I could live in it. With marble walls the fireplaces would have warmed the rooms and held the heat while the cool stone in summer would have kept it cool. Such a shame to loose such a grand place.
What a shame it's gone. Such a spectacular old house. Somewhere there are people who still have those pieces salvaged from it before the wrecking ball did it in, handed down by their elders who took them. Probably most have no idea where the items were from, and were thrown away or donated to thrift shops. But some may have been told what and where they were from. Lovely video. Thank you. Need to check and see if you've ever done the Greene & Greene Gamble House in Pasadena, CA. If not, it'd be a great one for you to do.
Beautiful So.Much Character Design And Interior So Well On Place Architecture So On Point Sad To See So.Much Creative Idea's And History Demolished Should Have Been Regenerated And Preserved Until The Of Many Centuries To Come
A white elephant doomed to a very short life! The exterior was a very nice design but looked more like a very grand Post office or municipal court building than anyone's house. And the interiors are hard to love - but maybe it's the photography. The ballroom is odd - it needs some tall windows and doors considering its ceiling height. And I doubt how appealing that mass of glaring white marble would have been in real life. What a waste.
It seems when people, anybody, gets that kind of money they think they'll live forever and that the money will always roll in. Then real life steps in and ends it. Too many of those people back then built houses that were just plain TOO BIG and expensive to keep up and they ended up torn down. This was the worst as it was only used for such a short time. The depression knocked off a lot of these houses.
House after house has the same story. Rich person builds a house to beat out all other houses. No thought to if it can be maintained. Rich person dies before completion or after spending a summer or two there. No one can afford to buy house. It’s then demolished. Rinse and repeat. The greed of that generation was incredible.
This is what I would have done if I won 1bill powerball. See how long it takes to spend it all. With all that money could have have family set for generations, F that I’m gonna spend it. It cool interesting story though
Before the Preservation Society of Newport County was established many of these illustrious mansions went by way of the wrecking ball. One of these mansions could not be demolished by a wrecking ball. A dynamite crew had to be hired. Sadly these magnificent mansions of the Industrial Revolution no longer exist. Gladly many of them can be visited on Bellevue Avenue.
Lake of the Isles has some of the most beautiful old world homes and mansion to this day. Obviously the nutter that built that house made it way too big as if money grows on trees
I found that it was a bit like a hotel, more so than a house! It has the same 3 or 4 common factors with other big houses, the owner only gets to enjoy it for a few years, or no years like this one, the wife lives in it for a bit until they can't afford it, they sell it to a contractor who rips it down to build apartments or houses. Often the 1929 stock market crash can add to that!
What a waste of a beautiful home - to be replaced by a house not half so big or beautiful! It could have been used as a church retreat or school, instead of being demolished. If preserved, it would be worth millions today. The demolition was an appalling waste.
My least favourite word of yours "lost". Another marvel that deserved a long and illustrious life, but didn't get it...it looks like a younger sibling of the glorious The Breakers.
He reminded me of the foolish man in the Bible who built more & more for himself. And he died that night. And this guy never even lived in it!! Tragic all the way around.
While beautiful, that Gates history isn’t very interesting. Forepaw Mansion or Grigs Mansion in St Paul have interesting history and are still standing on Summit ave.
At 925 S.E. 6th st there is a mansion. It was turned into a rooming house. I lived there for about 10 years. It was beautiful. The man who owned it and took care of it died. It went to his sister who sold it to the U of M. Now a bunch of frathouse dipsticks are beating it to crap, so the university can eventually dose it. Breaks my heart to think about it.
Lake-of-the-Isles Parkway in Minneapolis is lined with beautiful old mansions, each one outdoing the next. This house may have been the crown jewel. What a shame it didn't survive.
Thank you Ken. I live in Minneapolis and have walked around Lake of the Isles many times. There are still many beautiful mansions that still stand around the lake.
A great house and with so much potential to be well-used even if not as a family home, torn down after standing for so few years and being occupied for even fewer years. Of the houses featured in "This House", I think the story of the Gates mansion is the worst waste of a house I've seen.
Living near the area all of my life the “Lakes” were a big part of my childhood, swimming, bicycling and walking.
This house is one of many extremely memorable places that surrounded the area of Cedar, LOTI, Harriet, Theodore Wirth, Brownie, etc.
Sadly, many hardworking folks didn’t hand the work ethics they had over to their children and this was the result.
Historic buildings in Minnesota are usually deemed garbage and are destroyed. Duluth tore down an old hotel building that was connected to John Jacob Astor.
I agree. And it was only a few years old when torn down! Appalling.
@@brendamartini2165It's because rich people from other places are looking at MN as their new playground. Those people don't give a damn about anything but money and feeding their own ego.
I'm getting demolition burnout watching This House. I understand this is an historical survey, but it would be a great relief to have a happy ending thrown in once in a while. Maybe start with a house museum and work our way back.
Such a sad story all the way around. Tragically, these stories seemingly have a bad ending. This story is no different. Thank you, Ken and Dalton!
At least you can still visit the James Hill mansion across the river in St. Paul. Bonus, it's surrounded by numerous other grand Victorians!
I've done that house tour. And then walked the neighborhood. So cool.
Such a gorgeous home! All that marble! Again, such a shame it couldn't have survived to be enjoyed by this and future generations. I hope they were able to repurpose lots of that marble. And what about the grand fireplace carved from one piece of marble!? I hope it was saved by someone.
What a stunning museum it would have made.
Absolutely an utterly beautiful and astounding house... such a shame no one could figure out a way to reuse it...much more grander and beautiful than what replaced it... thank you again for a nice visit
What an enjoyable video. I pause at every floorplan presented. Thank you for including these for those of us who really like examining such details as layouts and house design. From the beginning of the video I was wondering how much it would cost to heat such a behemoth in those brutal Minnesota winters. Apparently quite a bit.
I really appreciate the floor plans as well.
I got to work in a couple of the mansions on Summit Ave in St Paul with my dad's company back in the '80s and learned of the practice of shutting down and sealing off much of the house during the coldest and hottest months, specifically to save on the astronomical utility bills.
What a great house and such a shame it got torn down. Would have loved to see it.
Such a beautiful house, Ken. It seems so many owners of these homes never live in them , or, live only a short time in them. Have you noticed that many of the children of tycoons squander their inheritance? What a shame! Love your videos!
Curse of Turtle Island.
The majority of the rich here aren't supposed to be here and are subject to a curse published centuries ago as punishment for the rebellious colonization that resulted in the likes of wasteful construction such as the subject of this video.
Curse of Turtle Island.
The majority of the rich here aren't supposed to be here and are subject to a curse published centuries ago as punishment for the rebellious colonization that resulted in the likes of wasteful construction such as the subject of this video.
The beautiful Mediterranean style house pictured right next to it at 1:34 is still standing and it looks absolutely beautiful! One of my favorites on a walk around Lake Of The Isles, my old neighborhood. The South Minneapolis "Chain Of Lakes" area is loaded with beautiful old 19th and early 20th century homes.
Recall that my grandmother used her inheritance to also buy a house in Minneapolis around 1905 for the grand sum of $2,000 on Fremont Ave. North near St. Olafs.
Beautiful house, shame that it was so expensive to maintain.
This house is stunning. But so many of these magnificent houses suffered the same fate. How thoughtful it would have been if the people who built them put as much into the future upkeep as they did trying to show off their wealth.
Well, when you asked what became of this house, I knew it must no longer exist. I just can’t believe these houses that were built for the ages were demolished in so short a time.
Such an elegant home, I can definitely see the hand of architect Benjamin Marshall in its design. So sad that it lasted such a short period of time.
Crazy, looks like an east coast gilded era mansion. I'm from Minneapolis and didn't know this existed.
What a shame! Another great loss!! It reminds me of The Breakers in Newport,R I
How utterly sad. That was a beautiful home. Such a shame it's not there anymore.
A Beautiful home but such a short life span . This really was a grand estate . It breaks my heart to see lovely homes as grand as these are be left to disrepair and then be demolished.
I drove by this lot every day for 10 years. Had no idea about the history. The house that sits on the lot now was only built recently. There was a large 'modern' 1970s or maybe 1980s home there when I lived in the neighborhood.
An obscenity of riches. No single family would ever need to live in a house that size.
I wonder what a 37 yr old man could die, in his sleep, from? Was it ever determined?
I lived about 56 blocks from lake of the isles Back in the 1,970s. Gates picked a great Spot for his mansion.
Only 19 years in existence wow. The replacement home sold for 7.3 million in 2021 , a staggering sum for Minneapolis, a rather small somewhat forgotten metro area in the USA.
Have you been to Mpls? The population of Mpls is approx. 400k. The population of the Twin Cities metro is approx 3 million. Not small by any standard. Home to Target Corp., United Healthcare, 3M and General Mills, etc. Also, home of the largest privately held company in the United States, Cargill. Nothing forgotten about Mpls.
@@JiffypopIt's also a dump, so anything selling in the millions is staggering.
Quick everybody lets buy plane tickets to Minneapolis for sightseeing, said no one ever. Minnesotans are twisted too tight, it was said in jest. I was merely setting the stage for the price of the replacement home, which even if at 10 million would mean nothing in DC, San Fran, New York, LA....
@@pavelow235
The median price of housing in DC is $615K. The median price of housing in San Francisco is $1,216,087. The median price of housing in NYC is $979k. The median price of housing in LA is $972K. As I used to tell my staff when I lived and worked in Mpls: “Manage by facts”. You may want to give that a try.
It's a metro area of 2.6 million people. We don't disappear if the rest of the country doesn't think about us, haha.
It’s so sad, that Minneapolis doesn’t cherish history. I would rather visit any city in Europe because they restore and maintain.
We have several museums based out of the former homes of wealthy residents in the Twin Cities. The James J Hill house and the American Swedish Institute spring to mind.
Love your vids Ken this was unreal ,A air-conditioning (that was such a grand marvel at that time ) that ball room (fans myself) so sad , the poor house did not want to come down either ❤
So this house was only 10 years old or so when they tore it down? Is my math correct? If so, what a shame. I hope someone saved that marble fireplace.
19 years old.
The fireplace is exactly what I was thinking about too. It’s beyond a shame that magnificent buildings like this weren’t preserved with public funds or other means. It would have brought a great deal of money to the city from visitors. We no longer have the craftsmen to construct anything of this quality. 😢
*_Fifty-Thousand Square Feet?!_** (it was the Gilded Age version of "The One" in Bel Air)! A 0.40 acres chunk of its original lot sold in 2021 for $2 million.*
*(John Gates was legendary Wall Street speculator nicknamed, "Bet-A-Million Gates." His story easily merits its own turn on the History Channel)*
It was so cool I'd love two of them in different places
Another fascinating piece of history. This one is especially interesting in that I knew a relative of Dr Brooks. Probably his niece.
Beautiful
What loss. Wish it still stood. What a grand home and would be awesome even today. Wish I could live in it. With marble walls the fireplaces would have warmed the rooms and held the heat while the cool stone in summer would have kept it cool. Such a shame to loose such a grand place.
The pipe organ which was installed in the mansion is now located at Redeemer Lutheran Church, on Glenwood Ave in North Minneapolis.
What a shame it's gone. Such a spectacular old house. Somewhere there are people who still have those pieces salvaged from it before the wrecking ball did it in, handed down by their elders who took them. Probably most have no idea where the items were from, and were thrown away or donated to thrift shops. But some may have been told what and where they were from. Lovely video. Thank you. Need to check and see if you've ever done the Greene & Greene Gamble House in Pasadena, CA. If not, it'd be a great one for you to do.
I love your presentations.
I used to walk around that area and pretend one of those wonderful houses was mine 😊
Ken, I saw you on Hoarders! The tv was on and I heard your voice. I thought to myself - is that Ken? What in the world is he doing on Hoarders? 😂
Beautiful So.Much Character Design And Interior So Well On Place Architecture So On Point Sad To See So.Much Creative Idea's And History Demolished Should Have Been Regenerated And Preserved Until The Of Many Centuries To Come
Shame on demolition instead of restoration
Wow! Never knew this existed. Too bad it was lost.
A white elephant doomed to a very short life! The exterior was a very nice design but looked more like a very grand Post office or municipal court building than anyone's house. And the interiors are hard to love - but maybe it's the photography. The ballroom is odd - it needs some tall windows and doors considering its ceiling height. And I doubt how appealing that mass of glaring white marble would have been in real life. What a waste.
Cool!
I have walked around Lake of the Isles many times. This leaves me wondering exactly where is used to be.
Lake of the Isles Parkway East between 25th and 26th street. The house across the street to north (at the 1:32 mark in this video) is still there.
Wish that kind of house was affordable
Something I'm not quite clear about: for exactly how long was the Gates mansion standing? What was the date of compmletion?
It was completed in 1914 and stood for just shy of 20 years
So sad no one thought to convert it into condos, or equivalent. Missed opportunity for many to benefit!
Can't believe they torn it down.
Charles probably died after receiving the first heating bill.
Another tragic loss of American , architecture,history, and craft by artisans
History lost. Great video.
It's really starting to upset me that these wealthy "intelligent " people didn't set up trusts for the long term maintaining of these homes.
It seems when people, anybody, gets that kind of money they think they'll live forever and that the money will always roll in. Then real life steps in and ends it. Too many of those people back then built houses that were just plain TOO BIG and expensive to keep up and they ended up torn down. This was the worst as it was only used for such a short time. The depression knocked off a lot of these houses.
House after house has the same story. Rich person builds a house to beat out all other houses. No thought to if it can be maintained. Rich person dies before completion or after spending a summer or two there. No one can afford to buy house. It’s then demolished. Rinse and repeat. The greed of that generation was incredible.
This is what I would have done if I won 1bill powerball.
See how long it takes to spend it all.
With all that money could have have family set for generations, F that I’m gonna spend it. It cool interesting story though
Crazy that the son built the house and died before it was finished…..definitely a beautiful place…
Before the Preservation Society of Newport County was established many of these illustrious mansions went by way of the wrecking ball. One of these mansions could not be demolished by a wrecking ball. A dynamite crew had to be hired. Sadly these magnificent mansions of the Industrial Revolution no longer exist. Gladly many of them can be visited on Bellevue Avenue.
I just dropped my head when you said he passed away, like wtf 😭😭
WOW! All across this country beautiful homes were destroyed. SMH
Lake of the Isles has some of the most beautiful old world homes and mansion to this day. Obviously the nutter that built that house made it way too big as if money grows on trees
Ken, off subject a bit. But are you related to Stewart Hicks by chance? If not, you might have a long list twin or cousin. Lol
I'm not! Love his channel!
Ditto, I love his channel too. And I also love your channel!!! The reason I asked is because the two of you sound a lot alike to me. Lol@@ThisHouse
Oh, and thank you for all your amazing videos!!! @@ThisHouse
A terrible waste, but as a house it would have made a nice hotel. It had the appearance of an institutional or commercial structure.
The city should have repurposed that historic legacy.
I found that it was a bit like a hotel, more so than a house! It has the same 3 or 4 common factors with other big houses, the owner only gets to enjoy it for a few years, or no years like this one, the wife lives in it for a bit until they can't afford it, they sell it to a contractor who rips it down to build apartments or houses. Often the 1929 stock market crash can add to that!
What a waste of a beautiful home - to be replaced by a house not half so big or beautiful! It could have been used as a church retreat or school, instead of being demolished. If preserved, it would be worth millions today. The demolition was an appalling waste.
Just another example how the rich waste so much resources without any remorse or worry
America is the wrong place for such grand houses. The new ones are made of plastic and balsa wood. Maybe that's just as well.
How sad
Such a sad waste no would step up to buy and live there.
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Saddest story you’ve ever shown us. As you went through I was hoping it was still standing. Total waste.
sad.
What a waste of a gorgeous building. People are so short-sighted.
Ah yes, the early days of corruption, such simpler times. Money like this is not acquired ethically.
What happened? The heirs pissed away the hard working elders money. That’s what happened to the mansion.
What a waste...happily I have lived twice as long as poor Charles with none of $400M dollars! Lol
It seems like all that money was spent on nothing.
My least favourite word of yours "lost". Another marvel that deserved a long and illustrious life, but didn't get it...it looks like a younger sibling of the glorious The Breakers.
What happened to the Gates Mansion? Bill sold it to Marilyn, and the Gates Mansion is now the Marilyn Mansion. 🎉 I'll see myself out...
white elephant
haha… exclusive balls…
He reminded me of the foolish man in the Bible who built more & more for himself. And he died that night. And this guy never even lived in it!! Tragic all the way around.
Sad, sad and sad.
While beautiful, that Gates history isn’t very interesting. Forepaw Mansion or Grigs Mansion in St Paul have interesting history and are still standing on Summit ave.
Another wreaking ball. So sad.
What a shame.
What a horrible story.
What a waste of other people's money.
That shows what happens when you inherit wealth without working. I'd say trump is a prime example of it today.
HISTORY LOST !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
At 925 S.E. 6th st there is a mansion. It was turned into a rooming house. I lived there for about 10 years. It was beautiful. The man who owned it and took care of it died. It went to his sister who sold it to the U of M. Now a bunch of frathouse dipsticks are beating it to crap, so the university can eventually dose it. Breaks my heart to think about it.
So sad. Built, barely occupied, then destroyed.