Serving Roslyn, Roslyn Heights and Old Westbury
$1
Friday, December 16, 2016
Vol. 4, No. 51
/,'$< +2 Gift & Party Guide
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HOLIDAY GIFT & PARTY GUIDE
FREE PARKING FOR HOLIDAYS
MARAGOS SAYS BAD PARKS PRACTICES COST $431K
PAGES 35-62
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LET THERE BE LIGHT
Party is over for Guest mansion Demolished Old Westbury home hosted likes of Dali BY M A X Z A H N The Old Westbury mansion of socialite Cornelia Guest, which came to be known in the 1970s for its lavish parties and famous guests, was demolished last week, Paul Mateyunas, a historian of North Shore estates, said. “It’s always sad to lose a piece of Long Island architecture and history,” Mateyunas said. “That house in particular was a hub of social activity in the North Shore for a good 40 years.” A demolition permit was
granted in August after approval from the village’s Building Department and its historian, said Brian Ridgway, Old Westbury village administrator. The 15-acre estate’s 28room brick Georgian mansion was built in 1924, Mateyunas said. “In comparison to larger estates built pre-World War I this house was one of those wonderful examples of a manageable countryside home,” Mateyunas said. It was purchased in either 1969 or 1970 by Cornelia Guest’s parents: socialite C.Z.
Guest and Winston Frederick Churchill Guest, an heir to the Phipps steel fortune, Mateyunas said. “They were a very internationally known and well-connected family,” Mateyunas said. They held parties at the estate, known as Templeton, frequented by the likes of Truman Capote and Salvador Dali, Mateyunas said. When C.Z. Guest died in 2003, Cornelia Guest took sole ownership of the Old Westbury property, where she lived until 2015, Mateyunas said. Continued on Page 92
Roslyn Harbor criticizes NCPD traffic enforcement PHOTO BY MAX ZAHN
A child holds onto the menorah at last Wednesday’s Roslyn tree lighting ceremony. See story on page 3.
Police dispute alleged uptick in car accidents BY M A X Z A H N Roslyn Harbor village officials criticized the Nassau County Police Department last Thursday for what they called a decline in traffic enforcement that has fostered reckless driving in the village, especially on
Bryant Avenue, where a collision two weeks ago resulted in two injuries. “The police are really failing us,” Deputy Mayor Jeremy S. Rosof said at a trustees meeting. “I hope I’ve got their attention.” Mayor Louis Badolato
agreed. “The last thing I want to see is someone get hurt in the village,” he said. The Nassau County police declined to comment, but cited statistics showing no increase in accidents at two key interContinued on Page 92
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