Planting Fields Foundation

Department: Archives
1395 Plating Fields Road
Oyster Bay, New York 11771
Phone: (516) 922-9210
Fax: Long Island Library Resources Council
Contact:
Marie Penny - info@plantingfields.org
Geolocation:

Planting Fields Foundation

About

Planting Fields Foundation strives to preserve and make relevant to all audiences the heritage of Planting Fields, an early 20th century 409-acre estate, designed as an integrated composition of the built and natural world. 

Planting Fields is one of only a few surviving estates on Long Island with its original land intact, as well as its buildings, including Coe Hall, a 65-room Tudor Revival mansion designed by architects Walker & Gillette. It began to take its current form in 1913 when the land was purchased by William Robertson Coe, an English immigrant, and Mai Rogers Coe, heiress and daughter of Standard Oil partner Henry Huttleston Rogers.

 
Planting Fields Foundation holds archival collections that consist of papers, photographs, films, architectural drawings, and other materials related to the planning, construction, and maintenance of Planting Fields during the Estate Era and the Coe family. The collection covers the transformation of Planting Fields from a private estate to a public park and the formation of Planting Fields Foundation. It is an invaluable resource for studying the history of Planting Fields as well as the philanthropic efforts of the Coe family such as W.R. Coe’s American Studies program. There is correspondence from Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain) who was a friend of Mai Rogers Coe and blueprints by Walker & Gillette to name a few of the gems found in the collection.

Of particular interest is photographic documentation of the site: from photographer Mattie Edwards Hewitt of the early days to Samuel Gottscho’s of the site’s evolution during the midcentury. In 2021, the Foundation acquired the archive of the Long Island based landscape architecture firm Innocenti & Webel. This collection consists of landscape plans, photographs, and correspondence for projects based on Long Island and throughout the country.  The acquisition furthers the scholarship of the collection by documenting the way landscape architecture has shaped our environment.

The archives are now located in a newly designed space located in the Haybarn building, thanks to a generous grant from the Gerry Foundation. There are over 500 linear feet of materials with room to grow for future collections. The collection will be accessible to researchers and digitized materials will be available online along with updated finding aids to the collection.

Planting Fields Foundation is a member of the Long Island Library Resources Council.

Collections

Coe Family c. 1910


Historic photographs of the Coe family