TO CONTACT ALDER MANOR ABOUT FILMING, PHOTO SHOOTS, WEDDINGS, OR ANY OTHER RENTAL PURPOSE, EMAIL joan@theplantmanor.com. PLEASE BE SURE TO SAY YOU GOT THE CONTACT FROM SCOUTING NY!

It sits on a hill just outside of New York City, completely empty and, for years, decaying and nearly forgotten…

Alder Manor 01

This is Alder Manor, and it’s without question one of the most amazing places I’ve ever had the pleasure of scouting. Built in 1912 by William Boyce Thompson, an extremely successful copper magnate, his plan was for a 72-room country estate for entertaining (he lived in New York City at the time) on 22 acres of hilltop land in then rural Yonkers.

Alder Manor 02

After both he and his wife died, the mansion was traded between owners who had no use for it and eventually wound up abandoned. Thankfully, it’s been purchased in recent years, and its restoration is slowly taking shape.

When you first enter, you find yourself in the enormous Main Hall, with the huge grand staircase off to one side. This is about when you start to wonder how such a place could ever be abandoned.

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Reverse of the main hall. We’re going to start by heading down that hallway…

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Which leads to the incredible library:

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Standing in the reverse corner, with a great stone fireplace and working chandeliers. I especially love how the books go over the doorway.

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From a distance, the room looks like it’s in excellent condition. It’s only when you get a little closer that you realize how much restoration is needed. Wood is rotting, the paint is fading and chipped…This gives you a better idea (still, a great candidate for restoration):

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Next door to the library is the Ballroom, with rich reds and blues complementing the mahogany woodwork:

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A painting over the fireplace is still in excellent shape:

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Across the hall is the dining room, as a short hallway behind where I was standing leads to the Kitchen:

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Heading now upstairs…

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Brings you to the second floor landing, featuring an organ…

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…which connects to pipes way up on the third floor.

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My favorite room in Alder Manor is just down the hall from the pipe organ: an indoor pool. On the second floor. Built in 1912.

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It’d be so great to see this restored to working order. The faded lime green paint, the black and white tiling on the pool…Apparently, there used to be antique Tiffany glass here, until someone found out and stole it.

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As you’re walking through the mansion, there are tons of artistic details to be found everywhere, like this bit of a ceiling painting:

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Scenic door painting:

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Found on another door:

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This was the design on the wall abutting the stairs:

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There are also a few missing details…

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Besides the pool, the second and third floors are essentially endless amounts of bedrooms…

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Some have been fixed up.

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At the end of the second floor is a conservatory and small balcony:

Conservatory

The gardens behind the manor are absolutely beautiful despite their decay:

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A gazebo in perfect condition, along with a pool:

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A beheaded eagle greets you when you enter through this gate:

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A wall with various reliefs:

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A Greek theater, where plays and other entertainments were once performed:

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Another pool:

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A reader writes:

“I worked at the Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research from 1955-1978 when the Institute moved to the Cornell University campus. It’s still there and is housed in a beautiful building constructed by Cornell. I visited Alder Manor several times over the years, including two weddings. Its beauty is self evident from the photos. Col. Thompson (an honorary title) loved his gardens so much that he decided to build and endow a plant research institution to learn how plants “work”. It was finished in 1923 and dedicated in 1924.

“Shortly after the Sisters of Mercy took over the estate, a piece of pottery was discovered in a cabinet. It turned out to be extremely valuable. As I understand it, it was Etruscan and was sold for “more money than was paid for the estate”. At least that’s the story I was told.

“W.B. Thompson was quite a man. The Colonel title was bestowed upon him when he led a mission to Russia after WW I. He actually gave some money to feed Russians in poverty and became known as the ‘Red of Wall Street.’”

If you’re interested in using Alder Manor for an event, film shoot, or pretty much anything, send me an email to nycscout@gmail.com.

-SCOUT

PS – For anyone counting, there was a front hall, library, ballroom, dining room, kitchen, and conservatory. In addition, there were empty rooms on the ground floor that could have easily served as the billiard room, lounge, and study.

PPS – Across the street from the manor in FAR worse shape is the abandoned Boyce Research Institute. I took some pictures which I’ll post in a future entry.

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  1. […] An Abandoned Country Estate in Yonkers […]

  2. KLynch Avatar
    KLynch

    I attended college there in 1989 before Iona took over. It was a beautiful small campus. One of the main reasons why I went there. I enjoyed having classes in the manor and would often attend study groups in the main hall. They was so much to appreciate in the manor and in the gardens. It’s a shame it was stripped of it’s beauty. They actually shot the movie Crocodile Dundee there for one scene. I hope someone will one day restore it. A lot of history there.

  3. bill Avatar

    this mansion was once left to an order of nuns and part of elizebeth seton college. i went there. it was a great place. also the scene in second crocidile dundee was filmed there, the one where dundee goes to his gf fathers mansion.

    i know the lower section of the college became foxfire school of city of yonkers, not sure who has ownership of the mansion.

  4. Dawn Corrigan Avatar

    I served as a tutor at Elizabeth Seton College in the Spring of 1989. Your pictures brought back wonderful memories of that magical, decaying garden. (I later wrote a poem about the garden, which interested parties can read here: http://www.wisdomcriethwithout.com/in-the-neglected-garden-by-dawn-corrigan/).

  5. Lynne Avatar
    Lynne

    The historic Alder Manor will get a $3 million renovation by its new owner.

    The Plant Manor of New York City outlined its intentions in an application for financial assistance with the Yonkers Industrial Development Agency.

    The Plant Manor, headed by Lela Goren, paid $5.5 million for the mansion and it seeks a sales tax exemption of $167,500 and an undetermined real estate tax break.

    The YIDA board will vote on the application on Wednesday at their monthly meeting.

    The property consists of an architecturally significant manor house of 35,000 square feet built in 1908 that is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

    The site also includes a former school building known as Bosch Hall consisting of 51,000 square feet and built in 1962.

    The Tara Circle’s website said the sale was concluded May 29; the group acquired Alder Manor in 2004 for $1.2 million.

    Twitter: @Ernie_G_journo

  6. Kate Avatar

    Hi! I know your original post is from 2009, but since you are still getting comments on this post, I just wanted to let you know that I took over as event coordinator in 2014. If you get any inquiries about weddings at Alder Manor, please direct them to me. kate@aldermanorweddings.com
    Thank you!

    1. Kate Avatar

      I just wanted to clarify that I am the event coordinator for Chefs at Work, exclusive caterer for Alder Manor.

      Thanks!

  7. arnold Avatar
    arnold

    I went to ESC and graduated in 1981, it was called Boyle manor at the time, I remember the cotillions held there, the nuns lived on the 3rd floor, I remember the grand staircase, pool, and the mysterious Greek gardens. I hope someone who appreciate architecture brings it back to its grandeur.

  8. Ryan Duckworth Avatar
    Ryan Duckworth

    What an amazing building!
    When I saw the empty pool on the 2nd floor i was reminded of an episode of Black List. Do you know, was this pool used in the filming of that show?

    1. Miss Mary Avatar
      Miss Mary

      Black List has done a lot of filming in Yonkers, so I would not be surprised.

  9. Jane Osborne Provenzano Avatar
    Jane Osborne Provenzano

    I was one of the High School American girls to attend………..what a magnificent place. Swam in that pool many times.
    It was so very beautiful when I went there………..Graduated in 1957……….I remember when Alder Manor was so very beautiful. I had many fun times. I did return to see it and was appalled to see the condition of the Manor.
    It was a jewel and with hope and money it can return to the Majestic place it once was.
    My memories are cherished. I am still in touch with many of my classmates.

  10. Miss Mary Avatar
    Miss Mary

    Martha Murray’s comment on how Iona raped the mansion– spot on. I went to many events there in the 70s. i had occasion to go into it about 3 months after Iona took possession… and was beyond shocked. I could not believe what had been done. The first thoughts that came to my mind, thought I expressed out loud, were, “My God. This placed has been raped.” I am quite sure the Tiffany windows were sold, not stolen. Iona sold everything and anything anyone wanted to buy. Light fixtures, paneling, you name it. I held an event there a after Tara purchased it, right after Mona Lisa Smiles filmed there. There were wires dangling from the walls; the movie company removed the lights they had put up, so our event chairman purchased wall lights and installed them. And yes, we left them. Tara Circle sold it to a developer not all that long ago. The office/classroom building behind the mansion will be torn down, I understand, and they will be renovating Alder.