• ...formerly the Lauder Greenway Estate, is a 50-acre (20 ha) private property with a French Renaissance mansion in Greenwich, Connecticut.
  • Originally known as Kincraig, the estate dates to the 1890s and once belonged to the Lauder Greenway family—Harriet Lauder Greenway’s father helped...
  • A former estate known as Kincraig, the estate dates back to the 1890s and once belonged to the Lauder Greenway family, Harriet Lauder Greenway's father...
  • The property, which is also known as the Lauder Greenway Estate , was previously owned by Andrew Carnegie’s niece in the early 20th century and more...
  • The property dates all the way back to the 1890s, when it was known as Kingcraig and owned by the wealthy Lauder Greenway family. The estate's 13...
  • Once known as Kincraig, the home of the Lauder Greenway family beginning in the 1890s has a mile of water frontage and its own private island.
  • Considering that a 75-acre Greenwich property nowhere near the water is listed at $32.5 million, the $190 million ask is a little more understandable.
  • Lauder Greenway Estate Gilded Age Estate in Greenwich, CT. ... 4.1 km. River Road-Mead Avenue Historic District Historic district in Greenwich, Connecticut.
  • Who owns the Lauder Greenway estate? In 1982, the estate was sold to the current owners, John M. Rudey, a timber magnate, and his wife, Laurie Rudey, for...
  • The 19th-century estate once belonged to the Lauder Greenway family, whose scion aided Andrew Carnegie in the formation of U.S. Steel.
  • George Lauder lived out the last eleven years of his life as a widower at the Lauder Greenway Estate in Greenwich, Connecticut.
  • This is Greenwich, Conn.’s last Great Estate, an opulent robber baron-era property enveloping 50 prized acres along the tony New York suburb’s waterfront.
  • Greenwich’s Outrageous Fortune. For more than a century, Greenwich, Connecticut, has attracted some of the biggest, newest, shiniest fortunes in America.