The DeGolyer House Dons Its Christmas Finery
Ornate holiday decorations make this historic Dallas estate, including a hacienda-style mansion and gardens, even more of an eyeful
Dressed in its holiday finest, the historic DeGolyer Estate in Dallas inspires and cheers winter visitors. Built by California architects Denman Scott and Burton Schutt in the Spanish colonial revival style, the estate was home to the late Everette L. DeGolyer — a prominent oilman, geophysicist and philanthropist — and his wife, Nell, also no longer living.
The property, which is on the National Register of Historic Places, originally spanned 44 acres on the shores of White Rock Lake. Today the magnificent estate is under the maintenance and supervision of the Dallas Arboretum and Botanical Society.
Tours: Monday through Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. through December 31, 2012; closed Christmas Day
Location: The Dallas Arboretum, 8525 Garland Rd., Dallas
Cost: Tours are included in the cost of admission to the Arboretum: $15 adults; $12 seniors; $9 children; free for 3 or younger.
The property, which is on the National Register of Historic Places, originally spanned 44 acres on the shores of White Rock Lake. Today the magnificent estate is under the maintenance and supervision of the Dallas Arboretum and Botanical Society.
Tours: Monday through Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. through December 31, 2012; closed Christmas Day
Location: The Dallas Arboretum, 8525 Garland Rd., Dallas
Cost: Tours are included in the cost of admission to the Arboretum: $15 adults; $12 seniors; $9 children; free for 3 or younger.
Two Christmas trees and an overhead garland trimmed in red ribbon frame the entrance to the grand house, a meandering 21,000-square-foot structure evoking the feel of a Mexican hacienda.
A glittering 13-foot tree skirted with poinsettias greets visitors as they enter the living room. A portrait of Nell DeGolyer hangs above a baby grand piano.
The DeGolyers wanted their house to be grand enough to offer suitable hospitality to scholars, heads of state, artists, intellectuals and international dignitaries, but informal enough to accommodate a more casual lifestyle, too. Special features include an intricately designed coffered ceiling and an elaborately carved fireplace mantel.
A Nativity centerpiece adorns the dining room table. The original furnishings and tapestries reflect Nell's preference for 17th- and 18th-century English styles.
At the far end of the room, a unique shell-shaped alcove provides the perfect frame for a 13-foot Christmas tree.
At the far end of the room, a unique shell-shaped alcove provides the perfect frame for a 13-foot Christmas tree.
Nell's former bedroom glows with pink and gold holiday decorations. Minty green, it has opulent architectural details and simple furnishings.
Greenery, garlands and Nativity figures dress the windows and surfaces. Pale red poinsettias sit around the base of a dresser.
The bedroom boasts a fantastically large closet and washroom, almost unheard-of luxuries for a home built in the late 1930s.
The luxurious closet once organized all of Nell's dresses, shoes, hats, gloves and jewelry. It also has a vanity and a three-way dressing mirror.
A generously proportioned sitting room connects the bedroom with the rest of the house. White poinsettias, swagged evergreens and a decorated tree keep company with the room's feminine furnishings.
A glass Nativity scene perches on a gold-trimmed coffee table. Garlands and green metallic Christmas balls cover the cozy hearth.
Everette DeGolyer acquired thousands of books in his lifetime. The heart of the home is a magnificent library with shelf space for 15,000 volumes.
The library shelves are filled this year with a collection of crèche scenes from all over the world. The displays range from modern sculptural pieces to traditional carved figurines.
The home was originally called Rancho Encinal (Spanish for "oak ranch"), because of the many live oak trees on the property. It has 13 rooms, plus seven bathrooms, an attached greenhouse, a four-car garage and servants' quarters with two bedrooms. Of the 13 rooms, there is only one bedroom, since the DeGolyers built the home after their four children had already left for school.
The estate includes a long terrace patterned after the mission at San Juan Capistrano, California, and a charming inner courtyard reminiscent of Mexican structural design.
The property slopes gently down through the gardens to an infinity pool and finally to the banks of White Rock Lake. Glass art sculptures by Dale Chihuly will be on display in the gardens through December 31, 2012.