Secrets of the Swan Turnblad Mansion: Art, Architecture, and Intrigue!

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  • Опубликовано: 15 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 78

  • @Blbear2000
    @Blbear2000 17 дней назад +25

    The Turnblad's were really wise in their decision to turn this into a museum. They were really thinking about preserving this for the future as well as honoring all of the craftsmanship that went into the mansion. Many of the other grand old homes on Park Ave. have not been this fortunate. This is well worth visiting.

  • @anteeker
    @anteeker 17 дней назад +21

    The interiors of this home are some of the best I`ve seen yet. The woodwork and plasterwork are both incredible and it`s so fortunate that it has all survived so well. Thanks for posting, Ken.

  • @rgrndu
    @rgrndu 17 дней назад +16

    Beautiful. I'm glad it's been preserved. That level of workmanship is a thing of the past.

  • @David-tm8sl
    @David-tm8sl 17 дней назад +19

    Absolutely incredible home. So glad it survives intact with all of its architectural wonders!

    • @namelessone3339
      @namelessone3339 17 дней назад

      A friend's great-grandfather came over from Sweden to be a wood-carver at this this house. His surname meant 'oak leaf' (Ekblatt, I think) and he carved oak leaves as a signature.

  • @markkotishion2379
    @markkotishion2379 17 дней назад +14

    Finally, one that is still standing. So many have been lost to artistic endeavors like asphalt parking lots or cube shaped examples of the Fisher-Price school of architecture, where if the architects crayon breaks the project is halted.

  • @Donald_Shaw
    @Donald_Shaw 17 дней назад +14

    I live in Minneapolis and have toured this marvelous mansion in person. Thank you Ken for showcasing this fabulous home.

  • @donchandler755
    @donchandler755 17 дней назад +13

    I am constantly amazed at the wealth some people acquired in those early days of our country. This is an incredible house and so glad that it still stands.

  • @MrRabidtroll
    @MrRabidtroll 15 дней назад +4

    I dread coming to this channel because too many beautiful old houses have been destroyed. The knowledge of those losses depress me more than anything. Then there are the exceptions like this one which give me joy.

  • @ibuguru
    @ibuguru 17 дней назад +9

    Painted glass, painted plasterwork ceilings... some unique artistic/architectural elements add up to a stunning home. So glad this has been preserved. The original family deserves praise for planning ahead to preserve what they built.

  • @rickyt3961
    @rickyt3961 17 дней назад +10

    so happy to know it is still standing. what a treasure 🏰

  • @jelsner5077
    @jelsner5077 16 дней назад +1

    Minneapolis resident, here. This is one of my favorite old mansions. Thanks for featuring it.

  • @Barb-bq8nj
    @Barb-bq8nj 17 дней назад +2

    I live in Minnesota one weekend when I went down to Minneapolis. I went to the Swedish Institute. I loved the mansion. It was so beautiful. What is really nice is they use some of the rooms for their displays The grand hall is so beautiful. Loved all the woodwork and carvings all the different fireplaces. Thank you for making a video of this beautiful building.

  • @treasuremuch9185
    @treasuremuch9185 17 дней назад +8

    Incredible! Love everything you showed. And the griffins on the staircase!

  • @williamtyre523
    @williamtyre523 17 дней назад +6

    Beautiful home and glad to see it largely intact. Was interesting to see the extensive use of Swedish tiled stoves in lieu of fireplaces.

    • @namelessone3339
      @namelessone3339 17 дней назад

      The house has steam heat; the tile stoves are decorative.

  • @randyboglisch137
    @randyboglisch137 17 дней назад +6

    Absolutely fabulous..so glad he had the foresight to see to its survival... such a spectacular house. Thank you again Ken

  • @Jason-he8no
    @Jason-he8no 17 дней назад +2

    The family did live in the house from 1908-1915. I am a tour guide at ASI. It is the last remaining great mansion on Park Avenue that is virtually just as it was when built and open to the public. Come visit.

  • @dianespease412
    @dianespease412 16 дней назад

    The craftsmanship is incredible. Glad to hear it is still standing.

  • @londonjackbum
    @londonjackbum 17 дней назад +5

    The ballroom is on the top floor of the mansion and the entire roof/ceiling is glass. There was an elevator in the carriage house that would lift guests arriving to the ball in their carriage. They would step out of the carriage directly into the top story ballroom.

    • @emreisthle606
      @emreisthle606 17 дней назад +1

      Woah wth!!!! I didn't hear that in the VID. That's a part that should have been included in it's story bc it sounds unbelievable

    • @namelessone3339
      @namelessone3339 17 дней назад

      What's your source? I live across the street and have never heard anything that fantastic. The house and carriage house aren't connected. Many carriage houses of the day did have an elevator for lifting hay, bedding and out-of-season vehicles for storage on the second floor.

  • @amandab.recondwith8006
    @amandab.recondwith8006 17 дней назад +5

    Brilliant interior. Quite tasteful, considering the time in which it was built. I live in Sioux Falls, about 200 miles from Minneapolis, and we have that same tessellated granite that was an integral part of our local architecture in the 19th century. Unfortunately, the Urban Renewal movement of the 1970s ripped away much of our Victorian stone buildings. This house is perfect for its time.

  • @Emily_Paris
    @Emily_Paris 16 дней назад

    Yesss!!! This beautiful historical masterpiece still stands!! Sweeeet!!!

  • @LaurenceDay-d2p
    @LaurenceDay-d2p 3 дня назад

    So happy this splendid home has been preserved.

  • @minnesotamonk
    @minnesotamonk 17 дней назад

    I've toured the American Swedish Institute several times. It was always amazing how each room had different woodwork and how much of the furniture in each room clearly was designed as part of the overall design of that particular room. Thanks for featuring this...

  • @jimwiskus8862
    @jimwiskus8862 17 дней назад +6

    Love this, no expense spared! 💙💙

  • @kimhall5863
    @kimhall5863 17 дней назад +1

    The rich woodwork through out the mansion was so breathtaking‼️

  • @petermorlock4165
    @petermorlock4165 15 дней назад +1

    Every year they decorate the house in traditional for Christmas in the traditional Swedish manner. In my opinion that is the best time to tour the house

  • @rosiemcnaughton9933
    @rosiemcnaughton9933 17 дней назад +2

    Glad to see this magnificent home has survived!

  • @gloriastroedecke2717
    @gloriastroedecke2717 16 дней назад

    This building got the good fate many of these beautiful houses did not. I am thankful.

  • @bjkjoseph
    @bjkjoseph 17 дней назад +23

    Thank God, some greedy slimy developer didn’t knock this one down and put a big glass box in its place with their name plastered on it

    • @carlfrano6384
      @carlfrano6384 16 дней назад +2

      ...or a parking lot.

    • @Bungalowlover
      @Bungalowlover 13 дней назад

      …or they just tear down because “it was an eyesore” while they build the most gaudy mansion that would be out of style in less than 10 years

  • @BellaCroyda
    @BellaCroyda 17 дней назад +5

    I LOVE IT!!!

  • @kendranewton9071
    @kendranewton9071 16 дней назад

    The place is so beautiful, I can’t pick a favorite room.

  • @tanyamessimer6731
    @tanyamessimer6731 16 дней назад

    Wow!!! I mean WOW!! I love all the details they put into the house!!

  • @williamquinn423
    @williamquinn423 17 дней назад +1

    I live in Minneapolis please explore the James J Hill House in St. Paul on Summit Ave I love your channel Thank You

  • @richardmeo2503
    @richardmeo2503 13 дней назад

    Outstanding. Glad it was saved.

  • @tyeteames7192
    @tyeteames7192 17 дней назад

    Your videos are always informative and beautiful. Thank you.

  • @fyfriday
    @fyfriday 17 дней назад

    I live in St Paul, I’ve toured this mansion. This was a very good presentation! Makes me want to go back and enjoy that the building again in person.

  • @alexxstarr27
    @alexxstarr27 17 дней назад

    🎉🎉 u may have outdone yourself,another Amazing home we would have never known about!!❤......This truly beautiful and unique and a great ending which we don't always have........it could quite possibly be my favorite ever.....Thank you for your insight and excellent work!!😊

  • @ibuguru
    @ibuguru 17 дней назад +6

    When you consider how many Gilded Age mansions were built, how many built fortunes in such vastly disparate ventures, you realize that the US was an extraordinary Opportunity Factory for a substantial segment of the population in the second half of the 19th century. Significantly, this was before the income tax, when the US govt was frugal and lived within its means. As did most of those who grew wealth - frugal living for many years, planning ahead, building something of substance. We need to revere and preserve fruits of the great minds who worked hard. And remember, too, all those jobs these people created - jobs that could last a working-lifetime and provide for oneself and one's family.

    • @emreisthle606
      @emreisthle606 17 дней назад

      That's why you could make a legacy bc you weren't surrounded by fat, lazy, ass, Nascar, NFL, ml, TV watching AMERICANS ALL WORKING FOR THE GOVERNMENT. I'M JUST WAITING ON JESUS. THESE GODLESS HEATHENS AND MENTAL DEFECTS I am praying fur and loving as best I can. 😢😢Father gave mercy to all yet they rejected it and The GREAT I AM

  • @clairwaucaush7225
    @clairwaucaush7225 17 дней назад +4

    A happy ending for a change. Do they give tours of the house?

    • @ThisHouse
      @ThisHouse  17 дней назад +3

      The museum is open to the public with admission

  • @EuropeanHitMan
    @EuropeanHitMan 17 дней назад +1

    The garage has a state of the art turn table

  • @mamiefish4047
    @mamiefish4047 17 дней назад +3

    Those are not fireplaces, but ceramic stoves, which are common in the Baltic countries.

  • @davidfaulkner8201
    @davidfaulkner8201 17 дней назад

    Now that is grandure !

  • @gayprepperz6862
    @gayprepperz6862 2 дня назад

    Minneapolis, once a beautiful place to live. That was LONG time ago.

  • @williamquinn423
    @williamquinn423 17 дней назад

    Ken your doing a great Job Summer Avenue in Saint Paul is one of the longest trecks Incredible Victorian mansions keep up the good work. I really appreciate what you do. Thanks again.

  • @jerrymiller9039
    @jerrymiller9039 17 дней назад +3

    Pretty good for a readership of 40 thousand

  • @BusyBob6971
    @BusyBob6971 12 дней назад

    It still stands!

  • @Eleven2Eleven22
    @Eleven2Eleven22 17 дней назад +4

    Love it, however most of the fireplaces seem small to me... A little weird!

    • @traluf1466
      @traluf1466 17 дней назад +6

      A large fireplace wastes a lot of heat up the chimney. The smaller firebox was discovered in the 18th century to be more efficient and resulted the in use of stove that actually heated the spaces by radiating the heat from exterior of the stove into the room

  • @kathleenadams3770
    @kathleenadams3770 14 дней назад

    I love the reading room🫶🏾

  • @kathleenadams3770
    @kathleenadams3770 14 дней назад

    I like the white and gold salon

  • @FeedScrn
    @FeedScrn 15 дней назад

    If this house was still a residence, IMO the theater room would likely have been converted into a true home theater.

  • @sopwithsnoopy8779
    @sopwithsnoopy8779 3 дня назад

    For once, the library wasn't my favorite room. I really liked the dining room!

  • @nick0340
    @nick0340 17 дней назад

    Extraordinary !!!

  • @scottweeks6379
    @scottweeks6379 16 дней назад

    ❤ Oh so Beautiful ❤

  • @elpirata5468
    @elpirata5468 16 дней назад

    Gargoyles and goth
    Check🖤

  • @vickiephilpitt7697
    @vickiephilpitt7697 13 дней назад

    Are you sure the Wizard of Oz wasn't hiding behind those curtains? Sorry, first thought that popped into my head when you said, "Let's look behind the curtains." 😅 Good thinking on Turnblad's part of turning the house into a museum. That was one way of insuring it didn't get torn down. Is the interior pretty much intact? (The various fireplaces and wall coverings, etc.?)

  • @Jmittle101
    @Jmittle101 17 дней назад +1

    So did it have a greenhouse attached to the house?

  • @vickilindberg6336
    @vickilindberg6336 17 дней назад +4

    They never actually lived in the mansion. The family lived across the street in a mansion that no longer exists.

    • @namelessone3339
      @namelessone3339 17 дней назад

      There was no mansion across the street. The apartment hotel (now a coöp) across the street was built in 1929 and was built on an empty lot. Swan and his daughter, Lillian, lived in #518. I live in the building (2615 Park Avenue) and face the Turnblad mansion.

    • @Barb-bq8nj
      @Barb-bq8nj 17 дней назад

      Yes, I was amazed when we took a tour of the mansion that they said they never really lived that long in there. What were they thinking? It is a beautiful home.

  • @danielmalone2976
    @danielmalone2976 16 дней назад

    Have you ever looked into the history of the Busch family home at Grant's Farm in st. Louis

  • @Otis-Tank
    @Otis-Tank 4 дня назад

    33 rooms. There you have it. Good old 33..IYKYK

  • @gregpendrey6711
    @gregpendrey6711 17 дней назад

    I noticed school house ceiling light fixtures.

  • @MissCleo1953
    @MissCleo1953 12 дней назад

    Ken would be nice to state the square footage of each home

  • @douglasdennett4583
    @douglasdennett4583 7 дней назад

    This would be the place to see a private showing of Ms. Angelina Jordan's new Jazzy Song "Bad Valentine" Piano Diaries OMG!

  • @jill-ti7oe
    @jill-ti7oe 17 дней назад +2

    👍

  • @mr.bill.8236
    @mr.bill.8236 12 дней назад

    I'm so glad it hasn't been to torn down. As far as I'm concerned, it would be like ripping down Neu Schwanstein.

  • @dmd5645
    @dmd5645 16 дней назад

    Acquiring wealth in those days was easy!!!..... NO INCOME TAXES!!. Not instituted until the early 20th century. And, thats usually how these once grand private homes survive--becoming institutions. Very Swedish influenced!, especially in the fireplace shapes and designs. Not your common American fireplace!.

  • @2615ParkAvenueAssociates
    @2615ParkAvenueAssociates 15 дней назад

    It is great to see this presentation, Ken. As you watch the video notice the beautiful porcelain heating stoves that were another fine detail of the mansion. Each is different and if you watch closely you will notice that one incorporates dwarves into the design. These were custom made and imported from Sweden.
    I live across from the Turnblad mansion/American Swedish Institute for thirty years and have often visited there and seen the steady improvements and preservation that has taken place. Swan and his daughter moved in 2615 Park Avenue (now a co-op) when he gifted the mansion and after his wife passed away in 1930. He and his daughter owned apartments in my building. His daughter was a fine artist.