Landscape Information
Built as a Picturesque summer home for the Choate family, the estate included a 40-acre farm, greenhouses, vegetable gardens, and a 44-room, Gilded Age mansion designed by architects McKim, Mead & White between 1885 and 1886. Landscape architect Nathan Barrett developed the original design for the terraced gardens in the 1880s. Mabel Choate inherited Naumkeag from her mother in 1929.
Fletcher Steele, often considered Americaās first Modernist landscape architect, worked between 1929 and 1956 in collaboration with Choate to design āgarden rooms,ā the longest commission of his career. Steeleās first insertion at Naumkeag brought Frederick MacMonnies statue, āYoung Faun with Heronā to the new Afternoon Garden. His distinctive Rose Garden, with serpentine ground plane patterning, is best viewed from above. No longer operating as a single path, the unifying watercourse originally began at the top of the hill in the Chinese Garden, site of Steeleās Moon Gate, then drained to the fountain in Barrettās Evergreen Garden, and down a rill to Steeleās most iconic work, the Blue Steps, which led to the cutting and vegetable gardens at the base of the hill.
Upon her death in 1958, Miss Choate bequeathed the house and grounds, now eight acres, to The Trustees of Reservations. Naumkeag was designated a National Historic Landmark in 2007.