Longtime Palisades hikers often ask us
about the mysterious “Elephant House” they remember by the
Womens Federation Monument in Alpine.
The magazine
Weird NJ even
featured an article about this structure, which “lay abandoned in the woods, like the
lost elephant graveyard made famous in the old Tarzan movies”and which about
30 years ago simply vanished, “as if a giant hand had come down and wiped the
house off the face of the earth.” The implication would be that no one knows
just what the house was, or who may once have lived in it.
Hmm. Had someone given
us a
call
They came in the early 1920s: John
Clawson Burnett, a young osteopath and scientist; Cora Timken, an artist and sculptor,
some years his senior and an heiress to the vast Timken roller-bearing fortune. The story
goes that they camped at the site for their honeymoon, as they drew their plans to
shape a private world high atop the lofty cliffs.
She designed all of the buildings,
crafting them to fit the contours of the stone-swept landscape. Their residence, faced in
green terracotta tiles, stood on the very cliff edge, plate glass windows offering a
panoramic sweep of the Hudson. It was built around two live trees, whose branches spread
above the graceful double-curves of the roof.
Many yards distant, in the woods, was the
dining hall, with a two-story upswept roof at one end to house a pipe organ that could
mechanically play from rolls of music.
For her husband, sited even more distant
in the woods, was the copper-roofed laboratory where he experimented with the healing
properties of electromagnetism. He believed he might find a cure for all of mankinds
ailments here, and the lab was constructed using no magnetic substances that might
interfere with this work.
For her, a pair of
“igloo”-like
studios set on distant outcrops of the escarpment, attainable
only by rugged trails that skirted
steep ravines. Other outbuildingsa guard house and a sprawling, U-shaped garage
structurewere scattered across the more than fifty acres they owned. For the larger
buildings, she designed curved corner columns that came to flared bases.
Around the bases,
large stones were set, to give the appearance of “elephants feet.”
Complementing the animal motif, just west of the residence was a swimming pool, lined with
rock and shaped like a coiled serpent.
Around it all was strung a sturdy
chain-link fence topped with barbed wire. Guards patrolled the grounds, accompanied by
dogs.
She filled the buildingseven the
groundswith art, much of it from the East. Into the manor house, with its two living
tree trunks, the contents of an entire Indian temple were carefully unpacked. Egyptian
statuarybirdlike gods and totemsstood sentinel along the pathways between the
buildings.
Even Dr. Burnetts laboratory housed
part of their extensive collectiona factor that only added to the tragedy of the
early morning hours of March 12, 1939, when a fire destroyed the lab and all its
contents. For years after, the lab remained in the woods, a burnt-out husk. But the Burnetts kept to their cliff-top lair.
She cultivated a reputation for
philanthropy, donating to art museums and the like. He became an active member of the
Alpine community, giving generously to the towns police and fire services. During
World War II, he served as the towns Civil Defense director.
He also made plans to assure his and
Coras own defense in a volatile and war-ridden world. Eighteen workmen were
contracted to construct a vast bomb shelter beneath the residence, hewn by hand (dynamite,
of course, was unthinkable here) from the dense diabase beneath the house. The shelter was
to be a hundred feet longmore than adequate to house the Burnetts and their art
collections.
But changes in the post-war world
presented, in hindsight, a greater threat to the life they cherished than bombs ever
would. The United States entered upon a spate of post-war highway building, and ground was
broken for the Palisades Interstate Parkway, to run from the
George Washington Bridge to Bear Mountain, New Yorkand straight through the heart of
the Burnetts unnamed estate.
A lengthy and acrimonious legal battle
ensued. In the end, the government prevailed.
Cora Timken Burnett died in 1956. In
1957, a condemnation award of $1,585,000 was offered to
Dr. Burnettfor an estate he and
his wife had maintained could never be given a dollar value. It could only exist precisely
where it existed. In October of 1959, Dr. Burnett followed his wife, at the age of
72. A
month later, a bid of $29,600 was accepted to raze the estate.
A section of chain link fence still runs
beside U.S. Route 9W. Just off the
Long Path, hikers still find the
swimming pool, now filled in, trees growing from within it. Beneath the hikers boots
are buried the six-foot-wide water pipes that led to three
75,000-gallon cisterns that
supplied the needs of the estate (but not enough to save the lab). Also beneath their
boots, presumably, is an unfinished bomb shelter.
Initially, one or two of the buildings,
with their “elephants feet,” were left standing, to be used as Parkway
maintenance facilities. That plan was abandoned and those buildings, too, were demolished.
Before their destruction, though, hikers would occasionally stumble upon them.
Three decades later, one
of those hikers would write an article about his
“weird” discovery.
Sources:
“$250,000 Fire Razes Mystery Workshop,”
New
York Times, March 13, 1939
“Dr. John C. Burnett, Osteopath, Was 72” (obit.),
New York Times, October 30, 1959
Kaplan, Morris. “Jersey Doctor’s Weird
Estate Atop Palisades Will Be Razed,”
New York Times, November 18,
1959
Kohm, William J. “Fantastic Jersey
Estate,”
Newark Sunday News
Magazine, April 24, 1955
Schneider, Stuart. “Elephant House on the
Palisades,”
Weird NJ
No. 9, 1997.
Sefton, Douglas. “Alpine’s Mystery House,”
New York Sunday News,
November 15, 1959