April 17, 2011 10:32 AM

The end of an era for the "Gatsby house"

The popularity of F. Scott Fitzgerald's Jazz Era novel endures to this day. But as Serena Altschul tells us, the same cannot be said for a glamorous house that may have inspired it:


Just yesterday morning on the North Shore of Long Island, New York, a magnificent old home was knocked to the ground.

Yet this is not your ordinary teardown. This is a house with a storied past ...

"The lawn started at the beach and ran toward the front door for a quarter of a mile jumping over sundials and brick walks and burning gardens."

You can almost hear the echoes of better days so beautifully captured in what many consider the Great American Novel: F. Scott Fitzgerald's "The Great Gatsby."

Lore has it that this house - called Lands End - fired Fitzgerald's imagination.

"It's exciting; people in town think it's exciting," said its owner, real estate developer Bert Brodsky. "They come by boat. They look at the house. They say, 'This is the 'Great Gatsby' house."

Built by a newspaper editor in 1902, the 21,000 square-foot house in the village of Sands Point hosted the likes of Winston Churchill and Albert Einstein. It's said the grand parties caught Fitzgerald's attention.

"Just picture the moon out, the band playing, all the people dancing and mingling," said Brodsky. "It's almost like not real. It's almost like a fantasy land. Like you read about it and say, 'No, nobody could really live like this.'"

"And, yet, they did," said Altschul.

"They did!"

Brodsky and his son, David, bought the property seven years ago, but the upkeep on the $18 million house proved too costly. It's been completely condemned.

As Altschul walked through, she remarked, "You can almost smell the days gone by."

The home was one of the few remaining relics harkening back to Fitzgerald's time on Long Island during the Roaring '20s.

Ruth Prigozy, the executive director of the F. Scott Fitzgerald Society, calls "Gatsby" the novel of its time.

She says no place symbolized the Roaring '20s better than what was known as the Gold Coast of Long Island, with its elegant estates, like the Guggenheims' Hempstead House, now a museum.

Prigozy says that strip of land represented "the epitome of everything you could strive for, everything you could want. You had optimism. You had a sense of what America was, the possibility of America. And you had it all embedded in one place."

Prigozy says Lands End represents the grandeur of the Gold Coast. "Oh yes, this home is the Gold Coast."

It was that grandeur that drew a young F. Scott Fitzgerald and his southern belle wife, Zelda, to the area in 1922. He was in his 20s when he wrote "Gatsby."

As seen in the 1974 film starring Robert Redford, the novel tells the story of a Wall Street trader named Nick Carraway, who rents a summer cottage next to the mysterious Jay Gatsby, who's famous for his lavish parties.

"The bar is in full swing, and floating rounds of cocktails permeate the garden outside until the air is alive with chatter, and laughter, and casual innuendo and introductions forgotten on the spot."

"If you read one of the party scenes in 'The Great Gatsby,' it is a compression of everything that's going on at time," said Prigozy, "a mirror of everything and everyone at that time."

At twilight, Fitzgerald would sit on a porch in Great Neck, gazing across the bay with writer Ring Lardner, towards Lands End, imagining the grand parties.

"They loved to talk about the rich people, and the people coming to the parties," said Prizogy, "and they could see it across the way. And they loved to talk about that."

Fitzgerald left Long Island before "The Great Gatsby" was published in 1925.

"It's so perfectly written, there isn't one sentence that you could take out," said Prizogy.

F. Scott Fitzgerald died in 1940 at age 44. But his memory remains on the Gold Coast of Long Island, even as the landmarks that got "Gatsby Country" continue to disappear.

Despite protests from historical groups, Bert Brodsky says they had no choice but to tear down the dilapidated house.

They plan to build five homes on the property in a community called Seagate at Sands Point.

"Are you sad about this?" asked Altschul.

"I am," said Brodsky. "Definitely a sad day. Life goes on. It's kind of a life cycle."

He says they're respectful of days gone by - and the book that still takes us there.

"So we beat on, boats against the current, born back ceaselessly into the past."


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Add a Comment See all 22 Comments
by FortWayneRealtor January 25, 2012 9:00 PM EST
Such a sad site to see such beautiful real estate destroyed. These homes represent a much simpler time and I cannot even begin to imagine the great memories this home held. Unfortunately as I have even seen in my small city of Fort Wayne, these large mansions are extremely expensive to maintain and due to the large size are ridiculously taxed. http://www.listwithbontempo.com
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by NaplesFLRealtor August 5, 2011 4:12 PM EDT
It's shocking to know that this house was finally tore down. As a Naples FL Realtor, I can say that Naples is always expanding and growing. People are always searching for beautiful homes. http://www.selectnapleshomes.com
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by outgoing11 July 30, 2011 3:42 PM EDT
This was not the inspiration for the Jay Gatsby mansion, it was the Tom and Daisy Buchanan mansion.
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by rockettsingh89 July 26, 2011 1:09 PM EDT
I wish I would have heard about this earlier! I have a few homes for sale and would have loved to purchase the home! I guess its too late now... Thanks for sharing though! http://shelleysells4you.com
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by YouKnowThatOtherGuy April 19, 2011 7:08 AM EDT
We should not waste so much time preservering structures of the past and make room for the living .How about we just preserve his book instead .
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by DemobyNeglect April 18, 2011 3:02 PM EDT
Ms. Altschul's otherwise excellent piece was seriously marred by her inclusion of Mr. Brodsky, the property's owner. Not only did Sunday Morning give this person airtime, but she "promoted" his replacement for-profit development (Seagate). Mr. Brodsky clearly seems to be the most responsible party for the building's deterioration. When he bought Sand Point seven years ago, it was in fine shape. And now after investing nothing into maintenance, what a surprise: He's tearing it down for new development because "it's deteriorated too much for rehabilitation." Shame on CBS for letting the guilty party off the hook on this one.
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by tfaulhaber April 18, 2011 10:12 AM EDT
No huge deal, but the house referred to in the passage read at the beginning the story was not Gatsby's. It belonged to the nefarious Tom Buchanan. It was an enjoyable piece nonetheless.
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by tmittelstaed April 18, 2011 5:26 AM EDT
You can't restore everything. I live in and own a home that was built in 1911, a century ago. If you think that is really cool your welcome to my utility bills. You also might like the mice, too. There is no way to seal up an older home to keep them out.

The wife liked it which is why we bought it but there is not a room in the place you can stand in and not see something that needs fixing. And the minute you get one thing fixed something else breaks. Unless you can do the work yourself - which I can - you would go broke owning such a house. And trust me after a few years it isn't fun anymore to be constantly fixing stuff even if you can do the work.
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by BluegrassRealtor April 18, 2011 12:48 AM EDT
Just show you how long demolition by neglect takes - 7 years. Home look nothing like this when it was sold. I have copies of the brochures when Brodsky bought it or perhaps find the HGTV episode of the blind auction that preceded Brodsky's purchase.
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by BoJet April 17, 2011 8:17 PM EDT
I love Americans, but I'll never understand you. You travel the globe in search of history, but seem hell bent on destroying your own. The Coconut Grove (at the Ambassador Hotel), Shea Stadium, Route 66 and now this.

You have a wonderful history America, learn to love it.
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by skeezix06 April 18, 2011 5:05 AM EDT
Parts of Route 66, the road, still exist. It may have lost a lot of the buildings along the way, but the road itself still exists. That said, people don't value the past here as evidenced by other posters. They are both incapable of seeing the past - learning from mistakes and planning for tomorrow. They only live in the present moment.
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