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Ormsby Lodge

Building in Pennsylvania, United States

The Ormsby Lodge was the summer home to artist Marjorie Acker Philips and her husband, art collector and Yale graduate Duncan Phillips. The house is a Shingle Style structure, popular from 1880 to 1900 among the upper class who could afford it. While its design replicates a Queen Anne's, it is undoubtedly a shingle style home. It is located in Ebensburg, Pennsylvania, built in the 1880s during the towns boom as a summer resort location where a number of influential Pittsburgh socialites -as well as wealthy people of note from elsewhere- built cottages or stayed in lavish hotel resorts. It was built on a 30-acre (12 ha) piece of land on the Belmont Tract which existed in the north-west corner of Ebensburg. One historian described the house in a grand way, writing:The house, for its time and location, was palatial, towering above the measly farmsteads of town with a spire of wood, fanciful windows with elegant woodwork designs, giant French doors lay at the threshold of each room whose ceiling stood far over the heads of residents, a wrap around porch that allowed the Phillips to enjoy the mountain air, and slightly sloping backyard where trees, maples and oaks mainly, sprouted and grew to almost vertigo inducing heights, rivaling and later outgrowing the size of the house.

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