Standing as a monument to the Roaring Twenties when it was designed and built, the impressive Harry and Ada Green mansion on the edge of Laurelhurst Park and its short list of owners have seen the same ups-and-downs common to the larger society.
Green, who had become the second president of the
1000-employee Doernbecher Furniture Manufacturing Co. in the 1920s, bought the
oversized lot next to the impressive brick home of former mayor H. Russell
Albee and recruited architect Herman Brookman to design a mansion.
“The Harry A. and Ada Green House was commissioned in 1927
on the heels of the Frank Estate and by a wealthy social climber,” states the mansion’s
submission to the National Register of Historic Places. “The house is one of few that falls into the
early revival period of Brookman's work, as the stock market crash of 1929
brought the lavish spending of the 1920s to an end. It is the only design of
that period to fully explore the Spanish, Mediterranean, and African influences
during the height of the Spanish revival craze that was fueled by the
Panama-California Exposition of 1915 --- which brought the architecture of
Southern California, Mexico, Spain, and Italy, as well as Muslim details to
national attention…”
It was a busy time for Brookman, who had been recruited from
New York to design a lavish estate for M. Lloyd Frank in the Southwest
Hills. At the same time, he was working
with other leading Portland architects on Temple Beth Israel, the Northwest
Portland synagogue that truly ranks as one of Portland’s finest buildings.
The Green house and landscaping cost $430,000, which an
inflation calculator says would be about $6.5 million today. The Greens, who had been married as teenagers
in 1909, moved in with six servants.
How long they enjoyed their grand residence is hard to
say. In 1950, Ada Green sued for
divorce, claiming alcohol and drug abuse by her husband. There were times, she said in court, when he
locked her out of the house. The number
of servants had declined from six to three.
Harry Green, who was removed as president from the Doernbecher firm the
same year, did not contest the divorce.
A judge ordered payment of $320,000 to Ada Green and half of
the house, then valued at $400,000.
Newspapers described it as the largest divorce settlement in Oregon to
that date.
Waiting to buy the mansion was Robert Bitar, a native of
Lebanon who had come to Oregon as a teenager.
He and his brother, Frank, opened a grocery store and Robert delivered
groceries by bicycle to the Greens, and he vowed someday to own it. The
two men later branched into construction and real estate development.
(National Register) |
Even so, the grandeur of the house (and its tiled bathrooms) was unmistakable. “It looks like a movie setting,” one visitor said.
At present, the house is being carefully restored by Karla Pearlstein, a historic preservation consultant. Its future use is yet to be determined. It is zoned for single family use. Converting it to a bed-and-breakfast or some other commercial use, possibly as an event center, would require a conditional use permit from the city.
Of course, nothing would prevent it from once again being a single-family residence. For a family with means....
Pool and bathhouse |