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After the completion of Coe Hall, the family divided their time between
a New York City town house, the ranch in Wyoming, and Planting Fields.
Generally they visited Long Island for longer periods during the spring
and fall, and for weekends during winters in New York City.
Like many North Shore estates, Planting Fields was almost totally self-contained.
The grounds included a large kitchen garden, chickens, and approximately
25 dairy cows. A miniature railway in the mansion's basement carried
coal to the boilers. The agricultural pursuits of Gold Coast estates
were rarely efficient enough to produce enough to support the entire
estate, but mirroring the country manors of British royalty was more
to the point.
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Servants
The amount of servants present at Planting Fields varied
greatly across the seasons and the years. In the spring and fall, when
the Coes would have been in residence at Planting Fields and when the
majority of work was needed on the grounds, there would naturally be
more staff present. During the winter there were far fewer servants
on the grounds and almost none in the house. During the summer months,
the Coes' house servants would have traveled with them to Cody, Wyoming,
while a large contingency of grounds men stayed at Planting Fields.
In the spring and summer, between the stable, dairy, greenhouses, farm,
chicken coops and gardens, Mr. Coe could expect to employ between 35
and 50 men in during the summer months. Between 1913 and 1955, there
were fewer and fewer servants at Planting Fields for several reasons.
The first reason has to do with the Coe family. In the early years at
Planting Fields, the Coes had four young children who would have had
their own assemblage of nurses and governess'.
Typically, from the time an infant was born until they will about four
or five years old, a nurse lived with them in the nursery or children's
wing to look after them. Once a child reached the age of four or five,
a governess was hired. The governess had absolute authority over the
raising of the children, besides of course, the children's parents.
The governess was generally French, English or German and taught the
children to speak those languages with fluency as well as teaching them
manners, grooming, lessons and possibly to play a musical instrument.
The Coe boys were sent to St. Paul's boarding school in New Hampshire,
while Natalie attended several private finishing schools in New York
and Manhattan. The governess was responsible for seeing to their needs
while away at school and for watching over them while they were on holiday
and their parents were abroad. Understandably, a child's relationship
with his or her governess was a close one.

Servants typically found their jobs were good ones, especially before
the reform of factory work. Those who work in the service of wealthy
families typically had room and board as well as their wages. Most families,
like the Coes, would have scullery maids and chauffeurs whose job it
was to wait on the rest of the serving staff. Servants' children were
chauffeured to school and church, and domestic help was chauffeured
to the train station to take shopping trips in Manhattan. The downside
is that in the life of a domestic servant, their time was not their
own. If the Housekeeper had to be awake at 4 AM to ensure that the house
was clean and breakfast prepared for the family, they would also still
have to be awake at 4 AM the next morning to serve madam's guests coffee
after a party that ran late.
The early 20th century saw improvements in factory work that came with
child labor laws, safer machinery, the eight-hour work day and Ford's
5-dollar work day, Still, it was not until after World War I that factory
work became an attractive alternative to those who would have gone into
domestic service, most especially women. By the late teens and early
twenties, factory work was the single greatest employer below farm work
and the number of people entering the domestic service fell off sharply.
The number of immigrants also fell off sharply after World War I. New
immigration laws sharply curtailed the waves of immigrants flooding
New York's harbors. Recent immigrants made up the majority of domestic
servants.
As we have no housekeeping records for Coe Hall we can only speculate
on the number of servants required by the Coes. The staff may have numbered
as many as twenty in the height of Planting Fields' use in the late
teens and early 1920's, with most of the help living in the half-timbered
servants' wing. In the servants' wing, there are second floor bedrooms,
bathrooms, sewing rooms and linen closets for the female serving staff,
while the male serving staff occupied the third floor rooms. Included
in the staff were several footmen, a parlor maid, a couple of chamber
maids, Mrs. Coe's personal attendant, Mr. Coe's valet, two cooks, a
housekeeper, scullery maids and three servants to assure each room of
the house had fresh floral arrangements each day.

The Coes or their guests beckoned the serving staff with small, sometimes
fancifully disguised call buttons throughout the house. The call button
would light up a panel located in the kitchen area and servants' wing
indicating which room needed attendance. Before answering the call,
they would press a button at the bottom of the panel that would clear
the lighted room to show the other staff that the call had been answered.
During the 1930's the undisputed King of the servants was Jocelyn,
W. R. Coe's butler and valet. He laid out Mr. Coe's clothing, opened
the door for callers, and looked after the silver.
Known by his staff as the "Iron Duke," Mr. Coe was an exacting
master who valued discipline and routine. He desired loyalty from his
servants who, for the most part, seemed satisfied, serving with little
turnover throughout the years.
In addition to the house staff, the Coes employed men to care for the
grounds. Their numbers changed depending on the season; however, we
know that late spring was the peak period for grounds employment.

W.R Coe with Jockey and his race horse
"Pompey"
Horses
Aside from horticulture, W. R. Coe's other consuming passion was horses,
particularly racehorses. His interest apparently began when he made
an investment of $1,000 along with 50 Piping Rock Racing Association
members to purchase 50 yearlings. By 1919 he raced his own horses at
Saratoga Springs, New York. In 1923 he paid $110,000 for THE FINN, a
record price at the time for a horse bought solely for stud.

Mai Coe and Feathered Friend
Birds
Like many of the most fashionable people of their era,
both W. R. Coe and Mai Rogers had a great liking for exotic birds, including
parrots and macaws. The Coes took several trips to the Caribbean, during
which they purchased birds to bring home. While a teenager away at boarding
school, Natalie was once promised a bird from Jamaica by her father
if she was good while he and Mai were away. Both W.R. and Mai Coe were
known to have kept birds in his/her bathroom, making the noise at their
end of the house considerable.

The Manor House
The Manor House
After Mr. Coe's death in 1955, Caroline Coe hired architect Eric Gugler
to design another house on the estate, today known as the Manor House.
At the time, Mrs. Coe was confined to a wheelchair and Gugler designed
the house to accommodate her disability. Many furnishings were removed
from Coe Hall to furnish this house, including mantel pieces and lighting
fixtures.

W.R. Coe canoeing c.1914
Coe and the West
In 1905 W. R. Coe spent a month hunting in Montana. His description
of the trip was found among the Coe family history notes kept by Miss
Marguerite Pettet, Mr. Coe's personal secretary.
"In 1905 I spent a month on a hunting trip in the Two Medicine
Country, Montana, which is now part of Glacier Park. My guide was Thomas
Dawson.
"I was accompanied by my brother (George) and Captain D. Gay Stivers
who was in the legal department of the Amalgamated Copper Company and
who arranged the trip.
"Dawson was a half-breed. He told me his father was a Scotsman
and I understood him to say his mother was a Piegan Indian. I was surprised
to find him well educated, and understood from him that his father had
taken him to Edinburgh and he received education there. After the death
of his father he returned and lived among the Piegan Indians and later
became a licensed guide.
"We detrained from the Great Northern Railway at a station called
Midvale, which is now called Glacier Park Station. Dawson had a small
ranch south of the railroad.
"I did not visit Glacier Park again until July 1940, and on mentioning
that I had been in that country in 1905 and had a guide named Tom Dawson
I learned he was in charge of the curio shop at the Glacier Park Station.
I went to see him, and as I approached him he called me by name although
he had not seen me in thirty-five years. He was well dressed, and while
he was probably in his eighties he did not look it and was apparently
in very good health.
" I understood that Dawson Pass in Glacier Park was named after
his father."
Coe's affection and respect for Dawson persisted, and his likeness
appears on the left corbel, south of the formal dining room door in
the cloister court.

A Wyoming family outing
Irma Lake Lodge
In l908 Coe went to Wyoming and at the end of the month decided to
purchase property there. Two years later he bought Buffalo Bill Cody's
ranch and commissioned the architectural firm of Walker and Gillette
to build Irma Lake Lodge. Throughout the years Coe continued purchasing
land. In all he amassed 200,000 acres which he used to graze cattle
and sheep, and raise alfalfa for winter feed.
The Coes made the annual journey to Cody, Wyoming, in their private
railway car, while the servants traveled in another part of the train.
Frequently Joe Ebel, the chauffeur, would drive out ahead of the family,
accompanied by some of the other servants.
The ranch was located on Carter Mountain, 7,500 feet above sea level
and approximately 23 miles from Cody by unpaved road. Just as at her
other homes, Mai Rogers was in charge of the staff which sometimes numbered
as many as 36. Twice a week a truck was sent to town for supplies.
Benefactions to Cody
Having adopted Wyoming as his official residence in 1912, W. R. Coe
made a number of gifts to the town of Cody throughout the years. Some
of the gifts Mr. Coe was responsible for include:
The huge courthouse clock.
During both World War I and World War II, Coe made sure bond drives
were successful by supplying any needed balance.
- He bought the bonds which financed street paving projects.
- He gave $250,000 for the completion of the hospital.
- He provided the third floor of the hospital complex.
- He supported the original Christ Episcopal Church in Cody.
- At his death, Coe left sizable endowments for both the hospital
and the Buffalo Bill Museum.
- He set up the Coe Foundation.

W.R. Coe receiving an honary degree from the University
of Wyoming in 1940
Coe Foundation
Under the auspices of the Coe Foundation, W. R. Coe gave the Buffalo
Bill Museum many western paintings and sculptures, including the Remington
Studio Collection. Perhaps his most important work through the foundation,
however, was the development of American Studies programs throughout
the country. In 1949 Coe read an article in the New York Times indicating
that only one third of American colleges included United States History
as a major. Coe began in 1952 by financing a summer refresher course
in United States History for high school teachers at the University
of Wyoming. A year later he endowed the University's American Studies
program with a gift of $750,000. Altogether the University of Wyoming
received over $2,500,000 in gifts and bequests, including the financing
of the American Studies wing of the library, acquisition of books, endowment
of a chair of American Studies, ten undergraduate scholarships, eight
graduate fellowships, and endowment for summer programs of refresher
courses. Coe also gave Yale University $500,000 to establish a professorship
in American History. In all, Coe and the Coe Foundation sponsored summer
programs at over 40 different colleges and universities, totaling more
than $1,250,000.

A memorial tablet placed by a garden path in memory
of Mr. William Robertson Coe who gave his beloved "Planting Fields"
to the people of the great state of New York so that it might be preserved
and developed as a public arboretum.
Anecdotes
1. W. R. Coe was involved in one of the largest tree moving operations
in the Northeast. When Mai Rogers' father, H. H. Rogers died, the family
estate in Fairhaven, Massachusetts was scheduled to be subdivided. Mai
decided to rescue two mature copper beeches that she had played under
as a child. W. R. Coe made arrangements through Standard Oil to have
the trees barged across Long Island Sound in the dead of the winter.
When the trees arrived in Oyster Bay, arrangements had to be made to
take down telephone lines, and to hire steam rollers to push the trees
and teams of horses to pull the trees to Planting Fields. One copper
beech survived and can still be seen on the west lawn.
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The trees arrive at the port of Oyster Bay
2. Mrs. Mai Coe once kept two of Robert Chanler's macaws in the playroom
of the New York City house where they did $500 worth of damage in one
night. Mr. Coe was not pleased.
3. William Robertson Coe to Mai Coe: "You always send those boys
(Bill and Bob at St. Pauls) telegrams. Why do you do that? It's too
expensive. Why don't you write letters?" Mrs. Coe: "You shut
up! I'm old enough and rich enough to do as I damn well please."
4. The Coes owned automobiles quite early. Once Bob Coe went out riding
near Fairhaven, Massachusetts, and killed 20 or 30 chickens, costing
him quite a bit of money. Sunday afternoons could be quite ghastly,
what with the old touring cars and the crowded roads of the 1920's.

Mai and son(Henry) in go-cart taken in the garden
5. One spring the American Orchid Society was going to hold its annual
meeting at Planting Fields. Coe allowed them to use the large room at
Coe hall, but had the house boy turn back the big rug because he didn't
want this group of people walking on the Oriental carpet. According
to Mr. Miller, it was quite a sight to see a group of distinguished
people in the Orchid Society walking through the main residence, but
walking to the side of the rolled rug!
6. Mrs. Caroline Coe liked to have flowers in her New York apartment.
One summer she had her apartment redone in pink, and she wanted large,
massive arrangements of pink flowers for a party. There were few pink
flowers blooming at Planting Fields, so Everitt Miller dyed many white
flowers, including some big white cannas. Mr. Coe marveled at the large
"pink" cannas and asked Miller where he got them. Miller explained
about the dipping. Mr. Coe laughed and replied, "For heaven's sake,
don't tell Mrs. Coe." (Late 1940's)

Mrs. Caroline Coe in the rose garden
7. After meeting the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, Mrs. Caroline Coe
was asked if she had invited them to Oyster Bay. "Oh heavens no,"
she replied, "they stay too long."
8. In 1936 the Coe residence was robbed. A burglar climbed up a column
and entered Mr. Coe's room. He had a habit of leaving his change, wallet,
and jewelry on the mantel. The burglar scooped it all up, then got the
jewelry from Mrs. Coe's room. After that, Mr. Coe never left his jewelry
on top of the mantel.
That same summer grandchildren Michael and William Coe were living
at Planting Fields while their parents were on a European tour. The
robbery was an exciting time for them, the house crawling with detectives,
everyone in an uproar. The thief was never caught nor was any of the
stolen material ever recovered.

Grandsons William R.Coe II and Michael D.Coe.
9. On one visit to the estate, Mr. Coes' grandsons, Michael and Billy,
were playing in the reception room where they spilled ink in the middle
of the wall-to-wall carpet. They panicked, and ran outside to scoop
up piles of fallen leaves to conceal the stain. That Christmas Mr. Coe
withheld their money gifts to pay for cleaning the carpet.
Coe-Rogers Wedding
There was a quiet wedding Monday afternoon at the house of Mr. and
Mrs. Henry H. Rogers, 26 East 57th Street, New York, when Miss Mai Rogers,
daughter of Mr. Rogers by his first marriage, was wedded to William
R. Coe, an Englishman, now residing in New York but formerly of Philadelphia.
The marriage ceremony was performed by the Rev. Dr. Robert Collyer,
pastor of the Church of the Messiah, on East 34th Street, in the presence
of a limited number of relatives and intimate friends.
The bride had no attendants. She wore a gown of heavy white satin,
which was almost entirely enveloped by a veil of embroidered tulle.
This veil was held in place by a diamond sunburst, and at the corsage
was worn an ornament of diamonds in the shape of a Maltese Cross, the
bridegroom's gift.
Mr. Coe's best man was Eugene Bicknell, and the ushers were Messrs.
Richard M. Montgomery, F. B. Campbell, D. F. Fox, George V. Coe, and
Henry H. Rogers, Jr.

The drawing room in which the ceremony took place, was beautifully
decorated with festoons of Japanese asparagus, mingled with apple blossoms
and roses, with a background of graceful palms.
Mrs. Rogers, the bride's stepmother, received with the bridal party
at the reception that followed the marriage ceremony. She wore a gown
of white silk and white organdy with a pattern of violets. Her jewels
included several strings of beautiful pearls, with diamond ornaments
in the coiffure and corsage.
At the reception, only intimate friends of the family were present;
the collation was served by Sherry.
Mr. Coe was a widower before his marriage to Miss Rogers. He is a member
of the Calumet Club of New York, of the Staten Island Cricket Club,
and the Merion Cricket Club of Philadelphia.
Mr. and Mrs. Coe were passengers on the steamer ST. PAUL. Wednesday
for Europe. They will be at Fairhaven later in the summer.
Source
Fairhaven STAR June 9, 1900, P.2. col. 4

Mai Rogers Coe
Natalie Mai Coe - Count Leonardo Vitetti
May 19,1934
The ceremony was held at noon in the Living Room (Great
Hall) of the mansion, which had been transformed into a floral chapel.
Pink and white dogwood branches almost concealed the walls. There was
a center aisle with guests seated on both sides, leading to a marble
altar, banked with white orchids from the greenhouses on the estate.

The bride wore a gown of antique ivory satin made on simple lines,
with a cowl neck and long tight sleeves with cuffs falling over her
hands. She had a long tulle veil edged with rosepoint lace which fell
in billowy folds to the end of her very long train. On approaching the
altar she wore over her face a little veil, which was thrown back after
the ceremony. She carried a satin bound prayer book with a jeweled marker
from which was suspended a jeweled Maltese cross. Her only ornament
was a diamond brooch fastened at the collar of her gown.
The matron of honor wore a long gown of yellow mouseline de soie with
a picture hat of the same shade. The bridesmaids wore long gowns of
green mouseline de soie and picture hats in the same shade of green.
They carried garlands of Caludius Pernet roses (sunflower yellow) and
daisies.
The Italian ambassador to the United States was the best man. The grooms
and ushers wore dress uniforms. Official witnesses for the bride were
her uncles Henry H. Rogers, Jr. and George V. Coe. Witnesses for the
groom were Count Galeazzo Ciano di Corteliazzo, son-in-law of Benito
Mussolini, who was represented by Lucianno Mascic, an usher, and the
press representatives of the Italian government.
The Apostolic Delegate performed the ceremony, assisted by a priest
from Catholic University in Washington, D.C., and the rector of St.
Dominic's Church in Oyster Bay. An organ was specially installed for
the service. Music was provided by an organist, harpist, violinist,
and ten members of the choir of St. Patrick's Cathedral, under the direction
of the choirmaster. The wedding breakfast was served out-of-doors at
small tables scattered about the terrace.
*Count Ciano had been denied an entry visa, so he could not attend
the wedding.
Sources:
New York Herald Tribune, 20 May 1934
New York Times, 20 May 1934
New York Journal American, 20 May 1934
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