Ellen Banning Ayer Country Estate – “Ledgebrook” // c.1905

Ellen Banning Ayer (1853-1918) of Minnesota married Frederick Ayer in 1884 and her life completely changed. Frederick Ayer was one of the richest men in New England and he was involved in the patent medicine business, but is better known for his work in the textile industry. After buying the Tremont and Suffolk mills in Lowell, Massachusetts, he bought up many textile operations in nearby Lawrence, combining them in 1899 into the American Woolen Company, of which he was the first president. The couple had at least three houses in Lowell, Boston, Pride’s Crossing and had three children (one of whom Beatrice, later married the famed general George Patton). As the Ayer Mansion on Commonwealth Avenue was being built, the family was looking for a country house near the city. One year, Frederick asked Ellen what she wanted for a gift and she said “roses”. Frederick purchased an old farmhouse on Nahanton Street in Newton and had greenhouses and a stable built immediately, followed by a Colonial Revival country house for his wife Ellen. The mansion held lavish parties for the Ayers, who loved to entertain and it was passed down to their eldest daughter Katharine Ayer Merrill. The property was purchased in the 1920s by Clive and Mona Lacy for decades until it sold in the 1980s. The large site was eyed for redevelopment. The architectural firm of Dimella Shaffer was hired, and they restored the Ayer House, and designed forty residential units on the site, all tucked into the woods gently peering out here and there. The old Ayer House remains as the clubhouse of the Ledgebrook Condominiums Association.

2 thoughts on “Ellen Banning Ayer Country Estate – “Ledgebrook” // c.1905

  1. Roger Lacy's avatar Roger Lacy July 14, 2024 / 8:53 am

    Wonderful picture of this beautiful house. I would like to clarify that in the late 1920’s Clive and Mona Lacy purchased this estate. They raised 4 children here, and loved and maintained the estate until their passing, and subsequent sale for development in 1984. This house currently serves as the clubhouse of the Ledgebrook Condominiums Association.

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