LOCAL HISTORY || GILLETTE'S CASTLE
south<-- view from the castle's promontory -->north .
The vista's expansive and while it is just a few kilometeres away from the house, I rarely go here | But with distant relatives visiting, it's an ideal excuse to go to this beautiful state park | My sister and brother arrive replete with other family and friends |
She's busted her toe but still does the tour just a bit slower than the rest of us |
Originally named the "Seventh Sister, after the rock formation upon which it is perched] the "castle" was a whimsey of actor and raconteur William Gillette | It was his
retirement home, where he lived and entertained until his death in 1937 |
During WWI [1914-1919], the manse cost over a million dollars to build | In the middle of WWII [1943], the State of Connecticut bought the estate for $30,000 USD, ensuring, according to the provisions of his will, that "...
no blithering sapheads..." would get the grounds and ruin them |
It's a popular site | Lots of people roaming about the the castle, its nearby forested steep ridges and rolling woodlands, [
184 acres of grounds, we're told]
And, as seen to the left, every castle needs a knight |
We visit inside | The lecture guides regale us with tales about the house [for it isn''t
really a castle] and grounds: one of the first to have a steel frame; how Gillette designed the entire building, it's gadgets [
many] and
gewgaws; that for some years electrical power was generated on site; that the project employed 20 men for several years and that the stone was carted up
by local farmers at $1 a load |
We're told about some of his many eccentricties: that he kept pet frogs; played practical jokes on guests; was enamoured of elaborate and [some thought] unnecessary detail; that he had international guests from Mary Pickford to Albert Einstein | He was briefly wed to a woman [
who died young and never lived to see the castle completed] and that he never had children |
Gillette was a complicated, brilliant man | Born of high-bred Hartford, CT family, he went into the performing arts against their better
wishes | He succeeded, perhaps most notably by taking the role of
Sherlock Holmes and creating in it the signature items [the deerstalker cap and meershaum pipe] that people nowadays think of as typical Holmes affectations | He starred in, wrote, directed and produced plays [
among them "Secret Services" from which the sketch on the left is based] | He was a prolific designer and aesthete | And he was, like the character he famously portrayed, mysterious |
For me, one mystery remains, that of Yakitaka Ozaki*, his friend and personal secretary, who lived with, or close to, Gillette for decades, residing on the estate until his own death in 1942 | An entire room is devoted to him [
one referred to only as Gillette's 'valet'],
yet little is said of their relationship | It's disaapointing that the tour guides don't even mention him, while, in contrast, they go to great pains to assure you Gillette was wed to a woman, however short that nuptuial was in effect | I'm certainly aware that many very wealthy people employ, as it were, life long companions, so I'm not implying anything here | But they clearly played some influential role in WG's life | More attention ought to have been paid |