"Woodcrest"
USA /
Pennsylvania /
Radnor Township /
World
/ USA
/ Pennsylvania
/ Radnor Township
World / United States / Pennsylvania
residence, country house, Horace Trumbauer (architect)
"Woodcrest," is the main building of Cabrini College and also the first building to have been erected on the property. Several administrative offices are located within the Mansion, in addition to offices held by several professors and the college President.
The lower levels of the Mansion, quite posh in appearance, often play host to both campus and external functions. The lawn behind the Mansion is often the site of commencement services for not only the college itself, but also for nearby Randor High School.
HISTORY
Woodcrest Radnor, King of Prussia and Eagle Rds. 1900
Currently Cabrini College Woodcrest was the residence of James W. Paul, an investment banker, and his three children. The mansion was accompanied by extensive stables, a gatehouse on King of Prussia Road, cow barn and dairy, springhouse, garage and a pavilion for the pool, all on 230 wooded acres. All buildings were designed by Horace Trumbauer in the Elizabethan-Tudor style. One of the most impressive features of Woodcrest was the stable complex. It was capable of holding 60 horses and also housed the estate’s non-household staff. His nephew Oglesby Paul was known locally as an excellent landscape architect, and designed the plantings for the entire estate. Paul came from an important family. His father was a well-known attorney in Philadelphia, his wife was daughter of banker and Wayne developer Anthony J. Drexel, and his sister was married to New York’s William Waldorf Astor, who died on the R.M.S. Titanic in 1912.
1900: Woodcrest construction begins
1901: The stables were built
1906: Estate undergoes renovations, including the addition of a stone wall around the courtyard
1908: The estate is inherited by Paul’s two daughters and son, none of whom decide to live in the house
1914: Daughter Ellen Drexel Paul builds Woodcrest Lodge on the grounds of the original estate
1924: John T. Dorrance, president of the Campbell Soup Company, buys Woodcrest
1925: St. Davids Golf Club moves to Radnor, and acquires part of the estate
1954: Woodcrest sold by the Dorrance family to the Sisters of the Sacred Heart; turned into an orphanage
1957: Becomes the campus of Cabrini College
www.cabrini.edu/default.aspx?pageid=1274
www.cabrini.edu/library/archiveweb/Woodcrest.htm
The lower levels of the Mansion, quite posh in appearance, often play host to both campus and external functions. The lawn behind the Mansion is often the site of commencement services for not only the college itself, but also for nearby Randor High School.
HISTORY
Woodcrest Radnor, King of Prussia and Eagle Rds. 1900
Currently Cabrini College Woodcrest was the residence of James W. Paul, an investment banker, and his three children. The mansion was accompanied by extensive stables, a gatehouse on King of Prussia Road, cow barn and dairy, springhouse, garage and a pavilion for the pool, all on 230 wooded acres. All buildings were designed by Horace Trumbauer in the Elizabethan-Tudor style. One of the most impressive features of Woodcrest was the stable complex. It was capable of holding 60 horses and also housed the estate’s non-household staff. His nephew Oglesby Paul was known locally as an excellent landscape architect, and designed the plantings for the entire estate. Paul came from an important family. His father was a well-known attorney in Philadelphia, his wife was daughter of banker and Wayne developer Anthony J. Drexel, and his sister was married to New York’s William Waldorf Astor, who died on the R.M.S. Titanic in 1912.
1900: Woodcrest construction begins
1901: The stables were built
1906: Estate undergoes renovations, including the addition of a stone wall around the courtyard
1908: The estate is inherited by Paul’s two daughters and son, none of whom decide to live in the house
1914: Daughter Ellen Drexel Paul builds Woodcrest Lodge on the grounds of the original estate
1924: John T. Dorrance, president of the Campbell Soup Company, buys Woodcrest
1925: St. Davids Golf Club moves to Radnor, and acquires part of the estate
1954: Woodcrest sold by the Dorrance family to the Sisters of the Sacred Heart; turned into an orphanage
1957: Becomes the campus of Cabrini College
www.cabrini.edu/default.aspx?pageid=1274
www.cabrini.edu/library/archiveweb/Woodcrest.htm
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 40°3'16"N 75°22'29"W
- Clairemont 3 km
- Ardrossan 3.5 km
- Erdenheim Farms/Property of Fitz Eugene Dixon Jr. 12 km
- Elstowe Manor 20 km
- "Elstowe Manor" 20 km
- Anglewood Day Camp 20 km
- Stella Elkins Tyler Estate 40 km
- The Old Foundation 84 km
- "Ballingarry" Summer Residence of Martin Maloney 115 km
- El Pomar 2528 km
- Wayne, Pennsylvania 1.6 km
- Radnor, Pennsylvania 1.9 km
- Gulph Mills, Pennsylvania 2.9 km
- Villanova, Pennsylvania 3.2 km
- King of Prussia, Pennsylvania 4.5 km
- West Conshohocken, Pennsylvania 5.2 km
- Norristown, Pennsylvania 8.2 km
- Delaware County, Pennsylvania 14 km
- Montgomery County, Pennsylvania 18 km
- Chester County, Pennsylvania 33 km