Manhattan’s last intact Gilded Age mansion is up for sale — and it’ll only set you back $50 million.
But you will have to get in line, because there are already six potential buyers champing at the bit to purchase the Fifth Avenue limestone town house, The Post has learned.
The six-story Beaux Arts building, which once belonged to the granddaughter of the railroad baron Cornelius “Commodore” Vanderbilt, boasts two elevators, eight bathrooms and 32 rooms. Some of the balustrades are hand-carved from a single piece of white marble, and dreamy frescoes of angels and clouds adorn the ceilings of the parlor rooms.
The Upper East Side palace recalls the grandeur of Versailles, with its palatial, white-marble staircase, patterned after the Petit Trianon, reaching heavenward to an intricately detailed, gilded skylight.
There is even a working stove from 1905, the year the home — built by the same architectural firm that designed Grand Central Terminal — was completed for its first owner, R. Livingston Beeckman, a stockbroker and later governor of Rhode Island.
“Everything is virtually intact,” said real-estate agent Tristan Harper, who listed the property on behalf of Douglas Elliman, and gave The Post an exclusive tour last week. “Whoever buys it will own a piece of New York history.”
Harper wouldn’t reveal the identity of the interested parties, except to say they are “all extremely high-net-worth individuals of different backgrounds.” He said they all want to maintain the property as a single-family residence.
Furnishings, as well as the artwork, murals and wall paintings, are all included in the purchase price.
The city’s Landmarks Preservation Commission, which landmarked the property in 1966, called it a “superb example of the French classic style of Louis XV.”
It was also a tribute to the Gilded Age — the term coined by Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner in 1873 to satirize the materialistic obsessions of the new wealth in America after the Civil War.
Gilded Age mansions, often modeled on the palatial chateaux of France, began popping up at the end of the 1800s, erected by storied industrialists and financiers like Vanderbilt, Andrew Carnegie, John D. Rockefeller and Jay Gould. Most were eventually razed or turned into museums.
Many of the biggest homes were built as summer palaces in Long Island, Massachusetts and Rhode Island, while mansions in “town” formed a “Millionaire’s Row” on Fifth Avenue on the Upper East Side. The first Gilded Age mansion was the Astor family’s home, featuring a ballroom that could fit 400, on Fifth Avenue and 34th Street. The family later moved to what was considered a more fashionable spot on Fifth at East 65th.


