Newport Casino
Captain
Cooks Casino official website Captain
Cooks Casino profile
The
Newport Casino is located at 186-202 Bellevue
Avenue, Newport, Rhode Island, United
States. It was designated a National Historic
Landmark on February 27, 1987.
History
(1879 - 1900)
The
complex was commissioned in 1880 by James Gordon
Bennett, Jr. Legend states that Bennett placed
a bet with his guest British Cavalry Officer,
Captain Henry Augustus "Sugar" Candy
that Candy would not ride his horse up onto the
front porch of Newport's most exclusive men's
club - The Reading Room. Candy won the bet, but
the Governors of the Reading Room were not amused.
Bennett and his infamous short temper did not
take this kindly, and soon set about creating
his own retreat, what would eventually become
The Newport Casino.
Soon after deciding to create his own social club,
Bennett purchased the Sidney Brooks estate, "Stone
Villa". Directly across the street was a
vacant lot, suitable for construction of the Casino.
Bennett hired Charles McKim (soon to be of the
firm McKim, Mead, and White) to design the Casino.
By January 1880, Nathan Barker of Newport, RI,
was contracted to begin construction.
The interior of the Casino, while generally outlined
by McKim, was entrusted to Stanford White. Taking
many elements and cues from the Japanese Pavilion
at the 1876 Centennial International Exhibition
in Philadelphia, White provided for a plan that
was both secluded and open.
The Newport Casino opened to its first patrons
in July 1880, and the general public got their
first view in August 1880.
History (1900 - 1954)
The
first half of the 20th century was unkind to the
Newport Casino. The Gilded age drew to a close
with the onset of the Depression, and the Newport
fell by the wayside as a summer resort for the
wealthy and powerful. The Casino struggled financially
as a social club right from the start, and by
the 1950s the Casino was in sad shape. Like many
of the mansions, there was the very real possibility
that it would be demolished to make way for more
modern retail space.
Tennis, however, would be its saving grace. Having
always had a sporting flair, the United State
Lawn Tennis Association held their first championships
at the Casino in 1881, an event that would continue
through 1914. By this time, tennis was firmly
entrenched as the key attraction at the Casino.
Fortunately, Jimmy and Candy Van Alen stepped
in, and by 1954 had established the Tennis Hall
of Fame and Museum in the Newport Casino. The
combination of prominent headliners at the tennis
matches and the museum allowed the building to
be saved.
It stands today as one of the finest examples
of Victorian Shingle Style architecture in the
world. The buildings are generally well preserved,
except for the Casino Theatre which is in poor
condition.
Buildings
The
complex includes:
The Casino (shops, a restaurant, offices, and
the International Tennis Hall of Fame)
Horseshoe Piazza and Court
Bill Talbert Stadium
Court Tennis Building (The National Court Tennis
Club)
Theatre
Indoor tennis courts (Newport Casino Indoor Racquet
Club)
Various grass tennis courts (Newport Casino Lawn
Tennis Club)
[edit]Sports
The
Newport Casino was never a public gambling establishment.
Originally, "casino" meant a small villa
built for pleasure. During the 19th century, the
term casino came to include other buildings where
social activities took place.
In its heyday during the Gilded Age, the Newport
Casino offered a wide array of social diversions
to the summer colony including archery, billiards,
bowling, concerts, dancing, dining, horse shows,
lawn bowling, reading, real tennis, tea parties,
and theatricals. It was best known as the home
of American lawn tennis; the Casino hosted the
1881–1914 National Championships, later
called the U.S. Open.
Today, there is still an active grass-court tennis
club, as well as an indoor tennis club. The Newport
Casino Croquet Club offers championship croquet
play on Newport's grass courts.
The Court Tennis Building is part of the original
complex, built in 1880. It burned down in 1945,
but was rebuilt in 1980. It is home to the National
Tennis Club. (Credit:
Wikipedia).
Newport
Beach, Sydney, Australia
Newport
is a suburb in northern Sydney, in the state of
New South Wales, Australia. Newport is located
31 kilometres north of the Sydney central business
district, in the local government area of Pittwater
Council and is part of the Northern Beaches region.
History
Newport
derived its name from being a new port for steamers
carrying passengers and cargo such as local shell
lime and firewood. Bungan Castle is a medieval-style
stone castle on Bungan Head built in 1919 by Adolph
Albers, a German art dealer.
Landmarks
Newport
features a primary school, many cafes and restaurants
as well as the historical Newport Arms Hotel which
is located on the shores of Pittwater and is a
popular spot for locals and tourists to visit.
Localities
* Bungan Head
* Salt Pan Cove (Credit:
Wikipedia)
Book
in progress
Give
him a tingle - 15th August 2005
(Credit:
The Age)
One of the more illuminating media websites belongs
to Greg Tingle, a self-styled media entrepreneur who
runs the public relations agency and news portal Media
Man Australia. Tingle is clearly a man of many talents,
describing himself as "a Sydney-based public
and media relations consultant, celebrity property
developer, publicist and promoter, TV presenter, journalist,
radio broadcaster, internet author, and an all-round
media entrepreneur and man of business brilliance".
Is there anything he can't do? According to his online
biography, Tingle's big break came when he phoned
2UE's John Laws and chatted on-air with the Golden
Tonsils himself in 2000. This media man about town
is also a budding author and finishing his book, Don't
Bulls--- a Bulls----er - From Newport Boy to Media
Man. His motto? "I say things others might think,
but are afraid to say."
Profiles
Greg
Tingle
Tim
Bristow
Books
and Authors
Coastal
Directory
Sydney
Australia
Media
Man Australia
Websites
Media
The
Manly Daily
Pittwater
Life
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