And I dream that I heard some noise. Donald was born August 16th, 1954, in Staten Island, New York, to Michael and Eleanor. But down here, all the beautiful homes that were down here are gone. Its still there, you can see it. Burke: Oh, well, when I was inI guess I was in England. Burke: You want it from the first day I was born in the hospital across the street? Did quite well. Its no different from home. Brother Bill? Burke: Mario Buatta got me into all of that. While stationed in England, he studied interior design and architectural history and began to collect antiques through estate sales and flea markets, focusing on ceramics, paintings, light fixtures, and many other decorative items from the Victorian era. A brooch that I gave Bess? And a couple of my friends came as bartenders for me. Theyre going out for the garbage. I said, No, no, no, Im trying to take them. So I took them and I had them all redone and reupholstered, and here they are. Anyway, I said, Oh boy, did I have a scary dream. I told her my dream. It turned my stomach just to watch all of that gorgeous stuff just destroyed. That was gorgeous. Burke: But I forgot what the other two things where. And we had our barracks, of course, and having your barracks, the only thing you had was a big trunk where you kept all your clothes in. Yes. And I want somebody to take care of it. If it wasnt for Mrs. Mackey across the street telling me about the funeral, I would have never known. And I said to the real estate lady, I said, Well, how do you know theres a ghost in there? She said, Because the old lady that originally lived in the house. And I invested in a couple of things. They are Chinese Chippendale. The real estate lady wouldnt come in. And a lot of people kept their horses in the stables. Burke: Im glad I did. And from the garden, you could come back in under the porch and down into the kitchen in the basement. You dont have to worry about, sleeping on your couches and all that kind of stuff, and, you know, pulling out fake beds, and that kind of stuff. And because of that, and especially the interior design thing, I went around, did little jobs, and did things, and because I learned so much by going to that to school there, that when I got back here, I got nice little jobs here and there. Burke: Yes, but just think of that gorgeous, bigthe mansion that this was their farmhouse, up the street here, that was gorgeous. He come over he looked at it. This was the farmhouse. And they said, Oh my god, George, what are you Oh, and who else was that? And right there in front of the windows was a coffin with all the flowers around it and everything. This the expensive piece of property! They sold it to the developers. See Photos. He brought a crowd with him and it was just to tell him thank you for everything that hes done. I had the best collection of the most beautiful carved ivory and things because they didnt have money but they would give you things. And places on Staten Island are being destroyed every minute of the dayyou find another house is goingand its happening in all the boroughs! What will I do? And I had two or three other girls that were there. With that old fabric, theres enough to make drapes for one window. Will they appreciate it? And then one of my brothers had just gotten out of the military. They were all six floor walkups and, thats where you lived! She was a nasty old lady! But that was funny. Youre coming with me. So Id say Okay, Murphy, lets go! She was something, I mean. So the next day, Im up and Im outside. Daller: And when he wasnt doing that, he was horseback riding because he loved to ride and thats kind of segued himself to the Seguine House and to Bess. Too bad that there wasnt somebody with a brain. Q: And so when you were deciding what to collect, were you thinking about. Because he paid for the entire outside himself. That whole salon set there was a Victorian salon setand the couch is a camelback. And each little petal and everything is done beautiful. It was his first time off of Staten Island. He worked by himself. But the problem is, its so limited on Staten Island. And she used to drink all the whiskey like crazy. And thats where I had all this wonderful carved stuff from the Eskimos that they gave me. Then upstairs, was all the bedrooms. Obituary: George W. Burke October 07, 2021 George W. Burke, 63 George W. Burke, of Hull, died on Oct. 2. Facebook gives people the power to. Special thanks to The Peggy N and Roger G Gerry Charitable Trust for their support to complete this initiative. And in the meantime, I made a couple of little investments and they turned out very well for me. A necklace with a gold heart that opened like a. You made enough money. Im getting rid of everything. He said, I have three of the most beautiful Persian carpets from Persia, said, You cant get them anymore. He said, Theyre antiques but they are brand new, never used. He said, Im giving them to you. And this is them. That is the only thing that worries methat the house will be stripped. Yes, Mrs. Mackey. I remember you always loved it and liked it. So I went out and I said toI had two roommates, and I said to my roommates, Wheres my box? And they said Oh, well, Sergeant Joiner came in and took it. I said, Oh, no! I went running out. That was her name. I thought for sure that would never go. Big fluted columns with big Corinthian capitals on them. But Id go off with Murphy and wed go to these estate sales and most of the stuff thats in here was, I bought and shipped it all back. The mayor and everybody else in the cityyou cant ride on the beach. My father was in the political-end, and he was in Borough Hall and everything like that. And if they only would have remained, they would have been a part of it, and everything could have been fully appreciated. But they tore the house down to build that school. He spends time in every part of it. So she was always, Come on, George. Im gonna save this house. And after he died the family still lived like we had my fathers money involved. And then I what else? A lot of these drapes, they did. So everything just kept going off and someone would have all of this, someone would have all of that. Yes, that was all Scalamandr. So I go downstairs. I was living in London, and I was studying the history of art and design, or something like that, in the University of London, and he was going and he was studying art. In fact, her husband was a big-wig. Daller: So not that much time was spent on Staten Island. Located in Staten Island, NY. But those things, I couldnt. I spent enough time breaking my back. Anyway, there was three things that I found by doing some worklike, giftsI forget what they were. I saved that, thats still there. I mean, you talked about it, when you were a kid, that it was this big house that you would see when you were out on, Daller: Its a part of the history of Staten Island. He had the military ship the items back to family members in New York City, a perk of military service that made moving his collection back to the States possible. My mother and his wife never got along too well. And finally, we met with John Krawchuk, when he became in office. George Burke is the restorer of the historic Seguine Mansion on the South Shore of Staten Island, where he has lived and taken care of the property for over four decades. People, Oh, could you help me? And especially when I came to Staten Island and I was working for Sherwin Williams, andwhat the hell, Florence? The ceilings had fallen down because a lot of the drain pipes had leaked. And they were good investments. Wow, what a great place. I said, now here you are, the woman we always wondered about, asking me if Im interested in saving that house? Q: No, that covers it! And they said he had the box, and took it with them. You could imagine what the mansion looked like. Still kept it. That woman, she lived in riding clothes! Burke: Yes. And I renovated the bar, I renovated the other side, my two sisters came to work for me, running the kitchen and the dining room. So I said, Well, I would have named it The Rossville Inn because it was in Rossville, but he will he loved Bermuda and he wanted Bermuda Inn. So I said, Yes, John, well call it the Old Bermuda Inn. So, Id do that. And that was, Mrs.these mirrors came from that house, they were in the parlor in that houseWhat the hell was her name? Burke: Well, look at the mansion! And they were big floors. Daller: I mean, that big wrap-around porch that went all the way around the house. So I went around to all the nursesof course, I was in the medical departmentand I asked all the nurses, What are you doing with your stamps? And she had this woman who was a caretaker. Daller: And that house was beautiful. Viewing times and guestbooks can be found here . When I was over there looking at their house. Thats what I wanted. Burke: Oh, its in beautiful condition because the guy I told you, Jimmy Pistilli, he had it landmarked. Coach Robert Joseph "Bob" Burke, 74, died April 4, 2020, at home, surrounded by his loving family, in Wilson, N.C. Most of them were little things. Daller: Well, he hopes that Historic House Trust and the Parks Department work hand in hand and maintaining itthat theyll maintain it as a museum. By the time I got to the to where they were discharging them and such, he had just been discharged and left on an airplane. I found him through somebody. Do you drink? No, we dont drink. So I would collect all the stamps. And all those Eskimos just loved me. So they built it like an attic and it was called an attic but it was a whole complete story. And I didnt realize it because I was always working. What are we gonna do here? So he said, Well, I really love doing this, George. And I said, Okay, John, thats fine. Sell the other half to Billthat was my brother and you and George, move with me to Florida. So we all thought that was a great idea. He upholstered that chair with the things in the back. Daller: Well, you got involved with Burkes Landing with Scalia. Got a good price for a couple of other real estate pieces that I bought and fixed up and sold. And the porch went all like this, around the house. Im only a salesman in a department store. I said, and its going to take a lot of money to put that house back together. She said, Well, Im going to help you all I can. And I said, But why would I fix a house I didnt own? And she said, Well, why dont we talk about that. She said, If youre interested in buying it, I will make the arrangements that you can own it. But, Q: Let me ask you some more about the items that you collected when you were. And, then I gotwhod I get from the city? Its a plus for the borough too. And you cant control it from the grave. Unfortunately. Where were you stationed and what was it like? She married her husband Thomas Burke on April 24, 1965, and had five children. So if this can remain a part of the history, thatll be great for people to appreciate. You cant ride on the street. Burke: Mario Buatta and a couple of people of his friends that were just as big. And I finally got to meet Mrs. Seguine because she had stables at that time. There was the main house, over here was the bar, over here was this big dining room, and this was the main house. But it only reached a certain point of it, not in the very beginning. So thats where I got most of the stuff thats here in the house today. Because I wanted the man that built the house, and this is the man that saved the house. 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. Daller: I think weve touched on everything, really. Id love that old house. I said, But Bess, I said your houseI dont know about saving it. I forgottheres ten acres that is landmarked now. Staten Island was very early on, and then Florida, and then off to Europe. Yes, and I had bought the house, but I couldnt have the house and move in until she died. They couldnt handle it, the clientele that came in. So its saved forever. Burke: Well, I wanted a beautiful Victorian look. Ill tell you the good stuff! [laughs] And that was it. Because he lived right here, lived right here on Staten Island. And there were two windows, like this. Q: Andif this is something that you cant discuss, let me knowbut, for example, if you decide to repaint, like you did in this room, is that something that the board fundraises for? And then Id been in Europe all that time. Daller: It just went right out of my head! By Carol Ann Benanti | benanti@siadvance.com STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- It's designated one of Staten Island's signature society events of the year, a. What the woman who was caretaking her, what she had to do was constantly keep lilacs next to the bed. And that was nothing but a little house that caught firewas just a little, little house. And my father died, and we were all very young. So as long as I own it, I own it, theyll pay for it. So I gave it to them. Copyright 1998 2023 New York Preservation Archive Project. Well, on theon the fireplace there, those two big candelabras, theyre Meissen. 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. The Greek Revival house is one of the few surviving examples of 19th Century life on Staten Island. And the people that lived there, they got a little too old to stay there. Q: I mean, I live in a small apartment, so what is it like to live in a kind of museum quality home? But, with that money, I paid this house off. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is a member of the Historic House Trust. And I looked back, you could hardly see the house. He was always at the stables there. Q: So well have audio recording and a transcript for researchersand Ill remove those names that you mentioned, Linda. Ill do that. So that was over in Port Richmondits still there, I understand, the store. 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. 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. Well, the paintings and the small stuff like thatthat like that mirror and those paintings and all that stuffthat was all the little stuff. Burke: Greek revival. Oh my god. They didnt have it six months and they went under. Its still there. And he was the one that took me around and showed me where to get the good fabric. And all these houses would never here! I mean, this whole ceiling was shot. I wanted to know some more details about the life tenancy. I bought those in Germany. So a lot of the things that you acquired to furnish the house were in poor condition, and then you have them reupholstered and restored. And the house was really, needed shapebut thank God it was built as well is it was built, otherwise it would have fallen down. The kitchen was never in the basement. But I had all this beautiful carved stuff. 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. On a goddamn pillared mattress sleeping? Q: And you knew the style from having studied the history of design and architecture. And then when we realized we were broke, all my brothers joined the military, got married, moved away. Burke: But everything will stay here exactly as it is, because if its going to be a museum, people are not going to come in and look at empty walls. And, she said, If so, we will give you gifts. And then that was the end. Burke: Sure. Burke: What its been like for you to live here. They cant do anything. And he asked me would I be interested in working for him out here on Staten Island. But I still have a lot of it. And now theyre buildingI havent seen it, but Linda says its a huge house theyre building. Burke: Yes, he did that little sofa there. And I said, Oh, shit. And he come from a very, very wealthy family in Madrid. But anyway, she said, Im not going in the house. And a friend of mine I was very good friendly with was John. Daller: Well, they hope to. Lets move out, youre being kicked out anyway, the house is sold. So they. So I had all my goodies packed in a box, getting ready to go. I just repainted. All these walls used to be white. Theres one here, theres one there, and theres one in the other room. Its still there in Port Richmond. Daller: Yes, well, thats what we just said, yes. Theres a ghost in there. And I said, Well, I dont believe in ghosts. Thats whats in this whole house, all the things you see. So most of the stuff is Victorianturn of the century and Victorian. That was all what she had in mind! So that was the reason we chose to do a White Party. But they hadnt been there, maybe five, six years, and I guess they decided, Oh! If you stood outside and looked at it, the staircase went that way. Or was that brother Ed? Q: Today is November 9, 2021. I said, Oh shit, look at this. And I pulled that out and unwrapped it, and what the hell was in it? And I took interior design and the history of architecture, and something else. Daller: No. Betsy P. Thompson East Greenbush, New York. Right across the creek. And that was a couple people from Tottenville, caused all that. We have a choice in having a caretaker come in also to maintain it. So I had people come in and wanted to buy the Tidewater Inn. Devoted father of Matthew I. Burke, Jason L. Burke, and Georgina P. Burke, all of Hull. So I bought it. Daller: We lived several places. And my sister, Bess, she was married to Walter, her husband, who was in the Navy. And he said, Mom, Ill move in to the other part of the house. So my mother decided she would make it into a two-family, and rent out one part of it. Find the obituary of William Burke (1966 - 2021) from Staten Island, NY. I moved in, I cleaned it all up. My sister, Frances, got me a nice little apartment in the Bronx, right next to her. I collected all my antiques and all my stuff when I was traveling. But he did a lot of the work for you. The following is a roundup of obituaries published on SILive.com. Lets stay friends. She left things there. All rights reserved. And thats where we are today. And my nephewwhat the hell was he? And so shes got the bridge, and it costs money. It was like a mansion youve never seen. Q: Yes, you can tell me about your early life and the memories you have of growing up here. And now the people that I sold it to, the Pistillis [James and Kathleen Pistilli], they had the whole thing researched and now its got landmark things on it and everything. The fact that the Seguine familythis was the farmhouse, their mansion was in Rossvilleand thats long gone. And in the basement, I put the kitchen and a dining area and everything. GEORGE CROAKE OBITUARY. Adriana would come out and shed say, Well, Ill tell you what, George. The columns werent square wooden ones, like these, they were beautiful fluted ones with all the Corinthian leaves on the tops of them and all that stuff. And she was living here all by herself. Q: Was that house that you restored in a similar condition as this house? I loved Alaska. 174 East 80th Street, New York, NY 10075Phone: (212) 988-8379 | Fax: (212) 537-5571Contact Us: info@nypap.org. Daller: Well, yes. I loved them too. So there wasnt a lot of time spent here. Daller: Oh, I dont know. And that was the end of that. Burke: Scalia. Its all part of history, and theyre just destroying it every way they can. Burke: She has it. But big stuff like couches and chairs and that kind of thing. I come down the stairs and I opened the door. Nobody wants to do that. Q: The Friends of the Seguine Mansionthe friends group. And I had more bargains from Mrs. Murphy. Scarpaci Funeral Home of Staten Island LLC. So coming back to it was a change. Q: So he knew how much work it would take over the years and what a relationship would be like to. And that was the Air Force. So, I would saywhat was it?the spring, and in the back of the house was the entrance to the cellar with the double doors, where you walked down the stairs, and it was all brick, and it had the doors. Burke: Yes, she held the mortgage on it. Thats not good. The same thing thats going on with statues. Q: Did you keep up a conversation with Mario Buatta about. And the White Party we do in order to take care of doing cleanup on the lawn, doing any kind of plantings, or anything, because he did it all the years. Burke: But anyway, when my time was up in the service, they shipped me back here to, Burke: Alaska, and I stayed in Alaska. And then the Historic House Trust will use it as well to understand whats important to you about maintaining the house. He appreciated it. Because she begged me. Oh, God, I worked so damn hard. Half the railings were gone off the porch, and the column was falling over, and, oh, Jesus. Save my house. And I thought, Oh, shit. I was down on the beach one day, I forgot what were doing. And she said, George, you have so much with design and such, I want you to take over the wallpaper department and the fabric department. I did fantastic for the store. Michael and Eleanor call it the old Bermuda Inn a roundup of obituaries published on.! Places on Staten Island because she had to do was constantly keep lilacs next to her if Im in., Florence an attic and it was called an attic but it only reached a certain point it... 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