BLANK SLATE MEDIA June 22, 2018
Garden party kic k s off L.I. WWI exh ibit
John S. Phipps, second from righ t, at
the Gymkhana th at
he held on his po lo fields in June
1918 to raise fund s
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for Canadian an d
OF OLD WESTB URY GARDENS
British war relie f.
PHOTO COURTE SY OF OLD WES TBURY GARDEN S
Harry Davision Jr PHOTO COURTE ., SY OF L.I. NATI Chairman of the Henry P Davision Sr., ONAL ARCHIV Red Cross during ES Trubee Davison WWI, and F. New York’s Fighting 69 th ar ri vi ng Mineola. at Camp Mills in BY A M E L I A C A M U R AT I
O
ld Westbury Gardens is commemorating the 100th anniversary of the Armistice of World War I this weekend with an authentic gymkhana garden fair similar to those hosted by John S. Phipps. Paul Hunchak, director of public programs, said the gymkhana, an equestrian event, will be held in the gardens with reenactments, equestrian exhibits, a British tea tent and a patriotic concert by The Band of Long Island on Saturday night with a collection of John Philip Sousa music. Hunchak said in June 1918, Phipps held a gymkhana as a fundraiser for the Canadian and British military as the war was ending. Though part of the exhibit opened in March with a special exhibition on loan from the National World War I Museum and Memorial in Kansas City, Missouri, a second portion focused
on the contributions of Long Islanders to the war efforts opens on Saturday and will run through Oct. 7. “The unique aspect of that is the U.S. wasn’t really ready to go to war,” Old Westbury Gardens CEO Nancy Costopulos said. “They had fought hard to stay out of the war for a while, and people like the Astors and the Vanderbilts and the Phippses used their own personal resources and commitment in order to help the U.S. get ready to go to war.” Though the United States officially entered World War I by declaring war against Germany in April 1917, many Long Islanders made contributions to other countries’ efforts including those by Phipps’ wife, Margarita, to the Belgium soldiers’ tobacco fund, Hunchak said. Hunchak said the exhibit begins in the Westbury House’s West Porch with a series of panels featuring photos, maps and artifacts to introduce attendees to
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RTESY OF O
Marshall Field and his wife
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RY GARDEN
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the war. Notable families mentioned in the exhibit include the Phippses, Vanderbilts, Astors and Roosevelts as well as F. Trubee Davison, who founded the First Yale Unit in 1916, which is considered the first naval air reserve unit, while studying at the university. Many of the exhibit items come from Old Westbury GarPHOTO COURTE SY OF OLD WES dens archives, but others were TBURY GARDEN S donated by residents, includ- The very first Po lo “D re am Team”, with a 40 ing one who donated a collec- cap, was m -goal handiade of, from righ tion of World War I posters, as Tomm t, Michael Phipp y H itc s, hc Cecil oc k Jr. and Stewar well as the Library of Congress t Iglehart, 1939 Smith, and the Long Island National Archives. PHOTO COURTE Old Westbury Gardens is SY OF LIB RARY OF CONG open from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. RESS Saturday and 10 a.m. to 6 Vi nc en t A stor and p.m. Sunday. christen a sea pl his wife Reach reporter Amean trol waters off Lo e to palia Camurati by email at ng Island acamurati@theislandnow. in 1916. Astor le d ef com, by phone at 516-307collect donations forts to to pur1045, ext. 215, or follow chase the plane her on Twitter @acamufor York Naval Militia the New rati. .