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Long Island

Nye & Co. taps trove in Long Island landmark home July 25-26

Long Island
Copper full-body eagle weather vane made in New England in the 19th or 20th century, 35in high x 50in long x 48in diameter. Nye & Company image

BLOOMFIELD, N.J. – Items from the estate home in Cold Spring Harbor, Long Island, known as Wawapek – the residence of the De Forests, a family so deeply rooted in New York history it dates back 300 years to the days of the early Huguenot settlers – will come up for bid in a two-day sale July 25-26 by Nye & Company Auctioneers. Absentee and Internet live bidding is available through LiveAuctioneers.

The auction will be held in Nye & Company’s gallery. The Wednesday, July 25, session will have gallery and Internet bidding. The Thursday, July 26 session will be Internet only.

Many of the items in Wawapek – a stately Gilded Age mansion built in 1897 and occupied by the De Forest family up until this year – will be in the sale. They include yachting trophies, Native American pots and baskets, American glass, and European and Mexican pottery, some of which was exhibited at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, where Robert De Forest served as president.

Long Island
Trios or Zia polychrome storage jar, 13in high x 12in diameter. Nye & Company image

Also from the De Forest estate will be numerous period furniture pieces – much of it New York in origin – Louis Vuitton and Goyard steamer trunks, and even a rare and simple pine box that Tiffany & Company used as a shipping crate that bears their label.

“A great deal of the De Forests’ collection was stashed away in Wawapek and shows condition commensurate with being forgotten in the attic,” said John Nye of Nye & Company Auctioneers, “but regardless, these items are a trove that’s rich in family lore and New York history. Robert De Forest, who built the home, was a major philanthropist and civic leader in New York City.”

Also up for bid will be original calendar art by Howard Pyle (American, 1853-1911), signed “H. Pyle” lower left and depicting a woman with a jug and ravens, plus 11 loose calendar pages.

Long Island
Original calendar art by Howard Pyle signed ‘H. Pyle’ lower left and depicting a woman with a jug and ravens, plus 11 loose calendar pages. Nye & Co. image

Also being sold, for fans of Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band, are pieces of Baroque-style furniture that were previously in the wine room of the home of “Mighty Max” Weinberg, the longtime drummer for the E Street band and bandleader on both of Conan O’Brien’s late-night shows.

Furniture pulled from Wawapek will feature a Wendell Castle black leather crescent rocker, a Queen Anne gumwood kasten, or cupboard, made in the 18th century in New York (possibly Long Island), a circa 1815 Neoclassical mahoganized recamier probably made in New York, and a Continental inlaid walnut music box on a stand, in working condition with extra cylinders.

Long Island
Wendell Castle black leather crescent rocker from the De Forest home. Nye & Company image

Decorative accessories from Wawapek will include a copper spread-wing eagle weather vane, an English late 18th-century George III mahogany dual barometer/thermometer, a floral-decorated Delft garniture set attributed to Justus Brouwer (Dutch, active 1739-1775), and a pair of 19th- or 20th-century yellow-brown glazed European wine jugs, probably handcrafted in France.

Native American objects from the de Forest estate will feature a pair of fine Trios, or Zia, polychrome storage jars, an oval Pomo basket with shell decoration and a Southwest Indian coil basket, circa 1900, with geometric four-point stepped star design.

Long Island
Pomo shell bead-decorated round basket with three rows of graduated inverted pyramids, circa 1900. Nye & Co. image

The De Forest family’s U.S. history can be traced to Jesse de Forest (1576-1624), the leader of a group of Walloon Huguenots who fled Europe and religious persecution. They emigrated to New York, where De Forest’s plan was to found New-Belgium, so the group could peacefully practice their Reformed Protestant Christianity. He sought permission from the Dutch to establish a colony in what is now New York City and was granted permission in 1624. That year a group of 60 families of Walloons and Dutch Protestants settled in what they called New Amsterdam.

Fast forward to Robert W. De Forest (1848-1931), Jesse’s descendant, who was general counsel for the Central Railroad from 1874-1924 and director of the New York & Long Branch railroad, All-America Cables and the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. He was New York City’s first Tenement House Commissioner and became the president of the newly formed National Housing Association of New York in 1910. De Forest was also president of the American Red Cross, the Russell Sage Foundation and the Metropolitan Museum of Art (1913-1931). De Forest and his wife, the former Emily Johnston, built the American wing of the museum. Ms. Johnston was the daughter of the Met’s first president and co-founder, John Taylor Johnston (1820-1893).

Start times both days will be 10 a.m. Eastern Time.

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