Bar and restaurant adds family and flavor to Weymouth Landing scene, Why New England Wildlife Center is treating a bald eagle for poisoning, Healey's proposed tax aid plan benefits families, seniors, homeowners, Mass. And I did, I got in St. George wasnt it? Yes. Yes. You werent allowed to buy much because it was worth a fortune over there to the general public, to the British. And where to get the good buys, and all that kind of thing. Burke: About the candle? Burke: And all the others like it, well, I can remember, on the other side of the pond over there, going alongthe mansions that were over there. Help NYPAP document and celebrate NYCs preservation movement. Off of Hylan Boulevard? Phone: (718) 966 . Then there was the main hall that went through, just like this: door, front door, back door. Its empty. And how people went along with them, I dont know either. Burke: And its great when you have friends come, you have extra bedrooms, you can put them all up. Everything has to be environmentally done properly, so by the time you figure it out, youre spending more money, when youre making no money because you have no horses. And she had this woman who was a caretaker. And then I what else? But when I die, they say theyre going to make a museum out of it. Lets stay friends. It was unbelievably gorgeous. And I looked in the thing, I said, Holy shit. Burke: Oh, yes. And if you can capture and keep something that looks like this, then this is a big plus for the area. But that was the cistern for doing all the laundry and everything in the basement. The mansion had a huge ballroom and everything in it. I said, Well, the only one I know that talked like that is Bess Seguine. She said, Well, this is me. I said, What is it, Bess? She said, I want you to come and save my house. I said, Are you kidding, Bess? I said, as a kid growing up, we were always down on the beach, looking back up at this big white house that looked like a big Southern mansion. And Luis was really, really a great guy. And when they werent in the house, they would go and buy them at the stores, and there was always lilacs in the house. Get service details, leave condolence messages or send flowers in memory of a loved one in New York. Oh, that was the ghost in Tottenville. If it wasnt for Mrs. Mackey across the street telling me about the funeral, I would have never known. So I went down and I just went around and everything I seenall the stuff you see hanging in this house, most of it come from me going around and wheeling and dealing in, you might as well say, the black market. So after a couple of years going back and forth, his daughter, she decided she wanted to get involved in it. Thats whats in this whole house, all the things you see. That was a shame. Daller: Thats been acquired over the years. Q: Was it Mario that suggested the life tenancy agreement? I bought those in Germany. I dont know what it is. Would you like to elaborate on that? And I kept life rights for it. So coming back to it was a change. But when he was in Europe, he rode. So as long as I own it, I own it, theyll pay for it. Burke: But anyway, it was a big beautiful cameo brooch, and was wrapped in an oil cloth rag! And he kept up with him, up until the time Mario passed away. George Burke. It has to stay exactly as an old plantation house. Besides horses and Rusty, there are peacocks too. I traveled all over the world, traveled to Alaska, all over, with the military. Leave your condolences to the family on this memorial page or send flowers to show you care. I was I wanted to know some more details about the life tenancy. You could imagine what the mansion looked like. Q: Yes. Q: Well, tell me about getting started on this house. Everybody smelled like that. Right. I mean, I could do a little woodwork, but I wasnt a carpenter. But I forgot what the other two things were. That was Mrs., what was her name? Was her name Mackey? Obituary George W. Burke, age 63, of Hull, entered into eternal rest on October 2, 2021. Because people will come in, and therell be four or five people and somebody will walk by and just pick this up, and pick that up. That house, it was a big French mansard, big Victorian. For example, could you tell what the original construction was? Daller: Plus the fact, it cost a fortune to take away the manure. And the house was really, needed shapebut thank God it was built as well is it was built, otherwise it would have fallen down. And I said, Well, the smell is still there. And I said to her, Whatever happened to the old girl? And she said, Well, years ago, when she died, she said, she was laid out in the front parlor in the coffin, and it was nothing but lilacs. Burke: Yes, I had to go down in the basement, and put a post, and then I had to jack up the stairs. And I didnt realize it because I was always working. So theres no more Scalamandr, I dont think, is there? We were only allowed so much. Daller: No, that still has to be discussed. Put through the years, people recognized it and everything. And it never had a kitchen. It feels like home, because thats what its been. And he wanted to retire and he gave his son the business. I mean, I had a beautiful condo in Florida. Burke: Its right on the Boulevard and it goes down to the beach. Restored the building, looked around, come down, bought this house from Mrs. Seguine, and then moved out of the bar and restaurantbecause I had a room upstairs in it. And I had a little house in Tottenville so I decided, well, Ill move into this big housein hereand Ill get rid of all the property that I have in Tottenville. This was in the East Bronx, this was on 167th and College Avenue. You come out and take over the boys and mens department in the store. I said, Thats fine. You cant ride on the street. Like there was old Greek, like the Parthenon, the Greek templesoh, it was beautiful. And Bill moved in, and he stayed there for quite a while. He worked by himself. And as I said, for a thing of whiskey or a bottle of wine, theyd give you anything, because none of them have had it for years and years. Burke: But I forgot what the other two things where. They moved in there, and they lived there. Visitation will be held on April 24, 2015 at 7:00 pm at Casey Funeral Home, 350 Slosson Ave, Staten Island, NY. George Burke was born on Staten Island and grew up in Annandale before moving to Florida with his family. And then I decided Id get involved again with things that are going on. Daller: Oh, I dont know. Because you never finish, youre always finding something to do. And he was the one that took me around and showed me where to get the good fabric. Wantagh, Seaford . And then, it wasI guess that was in the spring, then later on, I dont know what I was doing. Is there anything, you think? The only thing that will save this house as a bulldozer! [laughs] But anyway, I saved it. Would you sell me the acres in the front? Burke: Down in the basement, my friend Eriche was great, with this Ouija board and all this stuffand he said, George, lets do a seance! So we got a bunch of people together and we went all down in the basement. It turned my stomach just to watch all of that gorgeous stuff just destroyed. So this house tells a particular story, a long history, but it cant tell the history of the other houses because they were so different. Burke: Yes, there was a little man in New Jersey. Q: I mean, I live in a small apartment, so what is it like to live in a kind of museum quality home? And in the meantime, I made a couple of little investments and they turned out very well for me. If you dont want to come dont show up. And he said since hes been here, he has nobody here. She said shell keep the doors locked and call Linda if anybody wants to get in and take anything out. And the people that lived there, they got a little too old to stay there. Yes. I went around and I got it and shipped it all back home. It was unbelievably gorgeous. Burke: Yes. They tear down one house and build five. But the upper story of the house was two more floors. George Burke. So we lived there, and it was a big courtyard and there were four buildings and the center courtyard was all grass. Daller: No, I dont. Ill do the whole window. Thats the only thing in the house left from the Seguines. And my father died, and we were all very young. And I said, Was that a dream? Burke: Oh, and then the house, when I bought it, everybodythe real estate lady, she wouldnt come in. So tell me about when you went to Europe. Christ, we had a good time. It was so overgrown in the front yard and everything. Because he lived right here, lived right here on Staten Island. All my life, I was raised in a big house. And she was laying like this. Burke: And what is a shame islike, you take [one of our former boarders], she has two horses that she used to keep here all the time. Some kind of jewelry. Burke: Well, I dont know if people will ever realize in years and years to come that I saved so much, but they did give me a plaque for restoration. Because she would always want her bottle of booze. Burke: You want it from the first day I was born in the hospital across the street? And a couple of my friends came as bartenders for me. And, she said, If so, we will give you gifts. And then that was the end. All went into the landfill. Big fluted columns with big Corinthian capitals on them. Theyre all gone. And then finally she sold the house and she bought a beautiful place in Greenwich Village and moved to Greenwich Village. So itll be part of Staten Island that people, maybe fifty years from now when theres not a spot left, theyll all come out and theyll look and say, Wow, this is what it used to be.. This was all field, all the way up, and she used to turn the horses loose on all the fields out there. Yes. And if theyre gonna make a museum out of it, theyre gonna have to pay somebody to greet people and take them on tours. Most recent obituaries in New York. And he said, George, Im selling my business. He said, when he was moving here, he told the people there, he goes, Im moving. I think so. Burke: Anyway, she was well known here on Staten Island. And then upstairs was like a big balcony above that porch. And they added this big dining room to the other side of the house. She was great because she would know. Its all stay in here. Daller: Mm-hmm! But the problem is, its so limited on Staten Island. Its a big plaque on it, its landmarked and everything. And I wanted these little chairs tufted but he had passed away before he could get around to tuft. Because it was a big roof, like this, and then the gutters run around. After Burke returned to Staten Island, he purchased and restored two houses and an old restaurant and bar before he was contacted by Bess Seguine in 1981, who had inherited the then-deteriorated Seguine Mansion. Burke: I never lived in a little small house, I have no idea. He was an antiquehe had a big rug business in. Q: I wanted to ask, also, theres a painting of you in the house, right? You know, nobody wanted to end it but nobody wanted to, say, Lets do it. STATEN ISLAND, NY 10309. When did it start to feel done? Im gonna save it, its a gorgeous house!. But unfortunately, all the stuff up there was cured by urine. Burn it down, put a candle in the middle of the hall. And I hope whoever is in charge of itLinda will probably be here in charge! And over the years, it became just prohibitive to try and do. And they said, Well, we cant handle it, George. Q: Is there somebody in particular that you work with for reupholstery or restorations? And I took interior design and the history of architecture, and something else. Daller: Thats a story you should share, about the lilacs and the lady. Prince Edward Island. And shell be caretaker. And they were good investments. The stables were here for years. And he did these two chairs. In fact, he was just a few years older than I, and wasnt it last year we were trying to locate him? I mean, its just normal living in a normal house. So I figured, oh, shit. Daller: Right, we really dont discuss any of that. Lookit, I saved the police station and the two buildings next to the police station. Frank was born in Brooklyn, NY June 26, 1943. I want to go back and ask for some more details about your childhood. Daller: It was like, we cant even find him anymore. Youre working too hard. Put a candle right in the middle of that floor and go take a walk. [laughs] He called it the one-candle house. She had a caretaker or she had a woman that took care of her, or something. If we can reach an agreement with Historic House Trust, by all means. Im sure some will. [laughs]. So I go downstairs. And I wish the hell I could have gotten a hold of that before they tore it down. That was gorgeous. It was a mess. They cant develop it. And there were two windows, like this. They talk about Tottenville, its all McMansions. Everything has changed, all the old houses are torn down. Burke: Yes. Burke: Yes. One woman wouldnt go it, cant think of her name. I bet shes there. Half the railings were gone off the porch, and the column was falling over, and, oh, Jesus. I was always in the operating room or someplace like that. Viewing times and guestbooks can be found here . Hes been maintaining it for forty-plus years. Burke: Yes, and I had a beautiful apartment for years in St. George. So I went around and looked and looked and I said, You know, I could open a restaurant. And I walked around and I found a couple of nice places. She had to move them to New Jersey. What a shame. [laughs] But, itll be here. You couldnt even see it. Im always doing something. And thats where she was. She said, You saw her in your dream. I said, Holy shit, I said, you think that was her? She said, It could have been her. I said, Then she went like that and chased me out of her house. She said, That was her. The Secret Service, as well as a Cohasset school accounting specialist and the superintendent, are determining how much the operation cost the town. 6389 Amboy Road. That was her name. I think hes given you a great history of what started and, basically, youve talked about his life from the beginning, so, I dont know. Daller: But thats how he [referring to the painting of Mr. Seguine] came back to the house. Yes, that was all Scalamandr. I went to boot camp, I loved it. Then I got shipped to Europe. What will I do? And I had two or three other girls that were there. Burke: years ago, because I couldnt afford to keep it. I dont know, Im just used to it. And you would have been taxed in this country if it was already like that. Unbelievable. So I made sure it was filled in with dirt the rest of the way, so I wouldnt have that water getting in the basement. Q: Yes. Q: So well have audio recording and a transcript for researchersand Ill remove those names that you mentioned, Linda. The oldwhat the hell was itgrocery store. Find your ancestry info and recent death notices for relatives and friends. Thats when she said to me, George, go save my house. And I came down and looked at it. Burke: I knew that. And my other sisternow, of course shes passed awaybut now her daughter took it, and the daughter gave it to her daughter. And, then I gotwhod I get from the city? And it was actually three stories high. I started with the basement. I mean, I couldnt do stuff like that all the other stuff I could do. The whole family kind ofand the ladies got too old, and they decided they were going to move and go live inI think Georgia or Virginia, I forgot. And he had helped meyou know, while I had my own ideas for design, and whatever I thought of, he said, George, thats great. Id bring her bottles of whiskey and shed say, Listen, George, Im going to an estate for saleeverything in it is going! So I paid it off and bought it in cash, with the cash. They were the Mackeys. Im giving nothing away. Q: And will the board continue and play a role in in that? And we used to say, Wow, wonder who lives there? This whole corneryou could stand and see the street out there, so this whole corner was rebuilt. With that old fabric, theres enough to make drapes for one window. Thats what it is. And I got these. Well, do you know what your preferences are? This was the farmhouse. But what she did is she sold off parcel after parcel in order for her to live here in the house because she had no income. In this interview, Burke talks about working with designer Mario Buatta, along with the House of Scalamadr, to select furniture and fabrics to decorate the home in the Victorian style. But those things, I couldnt. Q: So what was it like when you had the house finished and furnished? Its still that way. Burke: Oh, well, when I was inI guess I was in England. Burke: Its never finished! And then, it was declared unsafe, and they come in and knocked it down. And you can put it together and fix it. Visitation will be held on April 24, 2015 at 2:00 pm at Casey Funeral Home, 350 Slosson Ave, Staten Island, NY. Thats ittheres no more of them. So that had the outside kitchen. Burke: So, in other words, fifty years from now, if someone wants to learn about the house, they can find out. Of course, over therewhen I was over thereEngland was just getting out of the bad part of the War [World War II], and they had nothing over there. Unfortunately. Destroyed. Burke: Oh, God, Mario come out here all the time. I wanted to ask about the Equestrian Center. Kitchens were always built in a house outside by themself, and a breezeway going to the house, because the kitchens would always burn down. Burke: So then I gave it to the Historic House Trust of New York. The following is a roundup of obituaries published on SILive.com. Because the other way, my uncle was digging into whatever a little bit of savings he had, in order to pay. We have a choice in having a caretaker come in also to maintain it. Q: So those things that you got later on, afterthey didnt come from Europe. They are Chinese Chippendale. And then I said, well, now Im going to buy a home. So you really cant even try to say what does it feel like? I found him through somebody. Burke: I went and I was stationed in England, and I loved being in England. And the post is still there and the staircase is still in good shapebut thats still in the house, now, down there. Constantly. My brother, he come in and he said, What are you, nuts? Of course, nothings there. So we need to get help. And a lot of people kept their horses in the stables. Luis was great. Facebook gives people the power to. But that was a big improvement, putting in the kitchen, because there never was a kitchen in the houseand where the kitchen is now, that was the laundry room. Daller: Yes, well, thats what we just said, yes. And people were selling anything out of their house to support themselves and live. Either you buy me out, or I buy you out. The stables, everything has to remain the same. As a young adult, he joined the U.S. Air Force and served in the medical department, spending time in locations across Europe and Alaska. He had come into my room when I was not there, stole everything. Yes, the dining room and the kitchen was on the other two, side. You know, everybody knew him, and everybody, wow. So we brought that point up a few times. The ceilings had fallen down because a lot of the drain pipes had leaked. But unfortunately, it all fell in. He was in the Air Force. He also discusses the donation of the Seguine Mansion to the Historic House Trust, and his vision for the ongoing maintenance of the home and property. I would have saved it. Victor. There was nine of us in the whole family. If you want to come in a business with me, John, lets make into a beautiful restaurant. So he said, Okay, Ive never owned a restaurant, but Id be willing to try it, George. So I said, Well, John, youre gonna have to put a lot of money in it because you have all the money, as being who you are. I dont think anythings missing? Youre coming with me. So Id say Okay, Murphy, lets go! She was something, I mean. I dont know if it ever took off. He moved into the house shortly after the sale, and worked from the basement to the roof, and outwards throughout the grounds and stables, to complete the restoration. Daller: You werent here. And we were great friends. Burke: Well, I was always an antique collector. But they hadnt been there, maybe five, six years, and I guess they decided, Oh! We just mentioned him. So I gave it to them. And my uncle came in and was part of the whole group. Loving son of Joan (Perry) Burke of Plymouth and the late George W. Burke. Valley Stream. But you do have Chris thats upstairs that lives in the servants quarters. And I had to have somebody upstairs, standing on the stairs, and told me when to stop jacking, when the stairs got level, because the stairs were like this. And then one of my brothers had just gotten out of the military. So I still had to get up every day and go to work. And the fact that somebody could save a house like this, and want to show it to people, and let people hear about the history behind it? It was similar, only bigger and more ornate. Im going to get gifts now because Im staying in the house and Im going to fix it up.. Q: You mentioned that the South Shore has changed in the last few years. And there was a whole other floor, another story, and its built with the French style, in the French mansard. I restored the whole housewell, how long did I live there? I went over there, and it was standing up sleeping! What the hell do you think it was? So finally, I think, the old lady died, didnt she? I open the door to the parlor. I said, Where are you? She said, Well, I moved out years ago and went back to Georgia. And it was twice the size of this house. Its all part of history, and theyre just destroying it every way they can. And all this beautiful stuff, I used to put in a big box. And my sister, Bess, she was married to Walter, her husband, who was in the Navy. And I saved quite a bit of money. It makes sense because she was an old lady. Births: July 1847-48, July 1853-1909 Deaths: 1795, 1802-04, 1808, 1812-1948 Marriages: June 1847-48, July 1853-1949 *Includes records for western Bronx, 1874-97, and eastern Bronx, 1895-97. Q: The Friends of the Seguine Mansionthe friends group. And it did all the dental workany kind of dental work and everything was manufactured there. Burke: Well, most of the stuff in the house, he worked with me. And thats where we are today. 174 East 80th Street, New York, NY 10075Phone: (212) 988-8379 | Fax: (212) 537-5571Contact Us: info@nypap.org. Burke: I think, what was left of it, the sons moved to California and they opened up a Scalamandr in California. Daller: Oh, theOh God now, whats it called? And then of course, being in New York and being in the thing like that, I got to be very, very good friends, with Scalamandr. Good God! Burke: Right across the creek. Is that what you want? I had no idea that that was it, when I bought the house or anything. And he was so good. Served in NYPD for 25 years, ran many mararthons George Arthur Croake, 78, of Manasquan, NJ (previously Flatbush, Brooklyn & New Dorp, Staten Island) passed away peacefully . Q: And how did you keep track of all the items in your collection as they were moving from, Burke: Well, a lot of this stuff, I never got back, because once you left it for years and years, you werent going to go back and say, Well, give me that, and give me this. Was it your mother I gave her all the blue and. So they said, You better get back here and do something. So I came back, got out of the military, got a job working for Saks Fifth Avenue. My sisterher mother [indicates Daller], Francesmy sister living in the Bronx, she got me a little apartment and she got me a job working for Saks Fifth Avenue. And she was laying with her arms, like that. Theres a bunch of little houses now built all along through their gardens. Im gonna go look. Burke: Mario Buatta and a couple of people of his friends that were just as big. Daller: Oh, yes. And getting an American Dollar from being in the service, getting my payeven though it wasnt that muchbut at that time, over there, it was worth a fortune. So, I dont know. Theyre getting rid of everything! I was maybe nineteen, twentysomething like that. I moved in, I cleaned it all up. Now what are you going to do with this? Thats what I wanted. Are you still interested? And I said, Well, of course I am. And they copied that from France, because thats what it was, it was the French mansard. I loved Alaska. Im joining the Air Force. So I went out and I joined the United States Air Force of course. Burke: Hawaii. And with the Air Force, I enjoyed every minute. And we were great gardeners and she had always come over in the spring, and she gave me little cuttings of all the flowers, and the different things. And it was very much built like this house. I found a beautiful place in Tottenville and I opened it and called it the Tidewater Inn. Burke: So I dont know if that was a ghost. So she said, Bess said, Were going to have to quit, George. I said Oh, shit. His family was like aristocratic. The beloved husband of Rosanna (Ialuna) Burke, he was the devoted father of Matthew I. Burke, Jason L. Burke, and Georgina P. Burke, all of Hull. Burke: Oh, I loved her. And then you could walk under the porch out into the garden. Because the water was in the basement for so many years, all the dampness had lifted all the floorboards and everything, and so I had to dry the house out, and replaster the walls. Who Where Receive obituaries Yenula Hennaka February 24, 2023 The walkway going to the beach, its still there, where the house was. What a gorgeous home that was. Theyre all McMansions. You can go and look and read about anything about the South Shore of Staten Island. And that way, it wouldnt burn the houses down. 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